Q&A: How and why Pew Research Center surveyed almost 12,000 U.S. journalists
Most of our research on the U.S. news environment has been from the viewpoint of the public, but this time we surveyed journalists themselves.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Most of our research on the U.S. news environment has been from the viewpoint of the public, but this time we surveyed journalists themselves.
This project represents our first comprehensive examination of Asian American identity using focus groups. Here’s how and why we did it.
We thought it would be valuable to combine our study of news coverage itself with data on people’s views about, and exposure to, that coverage.
United Kingdom legislators in the House of Lords and House of Commons tweeted more critical content of Trump’s recent visit to the nation.
Read a Q&A with Maeve Duggan, Pew Research Center research associate, on our survey examining online harassment in the United States.
Our new report on local news in a digital age looks at both the organizations providing the news and the residents consuming it.
Here’s a rundown of what worked and what didn’t in using Twitter for our research of three local news ecosystems.
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