U.S. stands out as among the least concerned about climate change
China and the U.S., the world’s largest greenhouse gas emitters, are among the least worried about climate change.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
China and the U.S., the world’s largest greenhouse gas emitters, are among the least worried about climate change.
The share of Republicans who say government regulation of financial institutions has gone too far is 38 percentage points higher than Democrats.
Americans perceptions of the economy differ significantly by partisanship, regardless of what the actual economic data show.
Almost six-in-ten uninsured Americans live in states that haven’t set up their own health-insurance exchanges under the Affordable Care Act.
Nearly as many Americans (39%) say the U.S. should be less involved in resolving the Israeli-Palestinian dispute as say it should remain as involved as it currently is (36%). About a fifth of Americans say the U.S. should be more involved.
A daily roundup of fresh data from scholars, governments, think tanks, pollsters and other social science researchers.
One of the biggest political puzzles of 2014 is why the public remains so bearish about the economy, and in turn critical of Barack Obama’s stewardship of it, given clear signs that economic indicators are improving. An analysis by Andrew Kohut.
As President Obama prepares to make a “major” speech on the economy today, our past reports describe the challenges the middle class has faced in the past decades.
45% of Americans say Congress should change the law to address sexual-assault problems in the military.
Americans have strongly favorable views of some allies and negative opinions about a range of others. Some of this is driven by U.S. partisan politics. And history suggests all such opinions are subject to change.
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