Data

Australian Election Study, 2007

The Australian National University
Bean, Clive ; McAllister, Ian ; Gow, David
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]] Cited: [[ro.stat.cited]] Accessed: [[ro.stat.accessed]]
ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.4225/13/50BBFA14B3CB1&rft.title=Australian Election Study, 2007&rft.identifier=10.4225/13/50BBFA14B3CB1&rft.publisher=Australian Data Archive&rft.description=The Australian Election Study (AES) is designed to collect data for academic research on Australian public opinion and behaviour during federal elections. It is based on a national, post-election, self-completion (mail-in, mail-out) survey consisting mainly of multiple choice questions. The 2007 Australian Election Study is the eighth in a series of surveys beginning in 1987 that have been timed to coincide with Australian Federal elections. The series also builds on the 1967, 1969 and 1979 Australian Political Attitudes Surveys. The Australian Election Studies aim to provide a long-term perspective on stability and change in the political attitudes and behaviour of the Australian electorate, and investigate the changing social bases of Australian politics as the economy and society modernise and change character. In addition to these long-term goals they examine the political issues prevalent in the election and assess their importance for the election result. In some cases, questions are repeated in each survey so that trends can be observed over a long period of time. However, in each survey there are always new sets of questions or modules added to gauge public opinion on contemporary social and political issues in Australia. The 2007 survey replicates many questions from previous studies, but also introduces a variety of new questions including a series of questions of Australia's social welfare system. Other sections cover the respondent's interest in the election campaign and politics, their past and present political affiliation, evaluation of parties and candidates, alignment with parties on various election issues, evaluation of the current economic situation, attitudes to a range of election issues including immigration, terrorism, taxation, unemployment, and interest rates, attitudes to issues relating to the environment and defence, and opinions on various social policy issues including abortion, equal opportunities, sex discrimination, and government assistance to Aborigines. Background variables include level of education, employment status, occupation, type of employer, position at workplace, trade union membership, sex, age, own and parents' country of birth, parents' political preferences, religion, marital status, income, and where applicable, the occupation, trade union membership and political preference of the respondent's spouse. The breakdown of the 2007 survey sections is as follows: Section A: The Election Campaign (15 questions) Section B: Party Preference and Voting (26 questions) Section C: Politicians and Government (12 questions) Section D: Election Issues (21 questions) Section E: Social Policy (12 questions) Section F: Global Politics (21 questions) Section G: Education and Work (7 questions) Section H: Personal Background (22 questions) The sample for this study was stratified, systematic and random. A sample of electors for all Australia was drawn from the Commonwealth Electoral Roll by the Australian Electoral Commission following the close of rolls for the 2007 election. The Commission supplied name and address information only, to be used only for this study. The sample was selected to be proportional to the population on a state by state basis. The data is available in a variety of formats including SPSS Portable, Stata v.8, Stata v.7, Nesstar Publisher, NSDstat, DIF, DBase, Textfile, Delimited, SAS and Comma Separated Value file. The data can be downloaded in a zipped folder together with documentation in pdf or xml format. &rft.creator=Bean, Clive &rft.creator=McAllister, Ian &rft.creator=Gow, David &rft.date=2008&rft.relation=http://www.ada.edu.au/documents/aes-trends-pdf&rft.coverage=name=Australia; northlimit=-9.221084; southlimit=-54.777218; westlimit=112.921454; eastlimit=159.105459&rft_rights= http://legaloffice.weblogs.anu.edu.au/content/copyright/&rft_subject=POLITICAL SCIENCE&rft_subject=STUDIES IN HUMAN SOCIETY&rft_subject=Australian Government and Politics&rft_subject=Australia&rft_subject=Defence&rft_subject=Economic policy&rft_subject=Elections&rft_subject=Employment&rft_subject=Environment&rft_subject=Immigration&rft_subject=International relations&rft_subject=National identity&rft_subject=Political parties&rft_subject=Politicians&rft_subject=Politics&rft_subject=Social issues&rft_subject=Social policy&rft_subject=Voting behaviour&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

Conditions of access to the Australian Election Study data can be found at the following link:

http://ada.anu.edu.au/ada/access-conditions

The Australian Election Studies are "General Datasets" and therefore General user undertaking applies. The following is a link to the General Access Undertaking form:

http://ada.anu.edu.au/documents/ada-general-undertaking-form

Contact Information

Postal Address:
School of Politics and International Relations Research School of Social Sciences Building 22, Haydon-Allen Building The Australian National University ACT 0200 Australia

Street Address:
Ph: +61 (0)2 6125 5553

Street Address:
Fax: +61 (0)2 6125 3051

Ian.McAllister@anu.edu.au

Full description

The Australian Election Study (AES) is designed to collect data for academic research on Australian public opinion and behaviour during federal elections. It is based on a national, post-election, self-completion (mail-in, mail-out) survey consisting mainly of multiple choice questions.


The 2007 Australian Election Study is the eighth in a series of surveys beginning in 1987 that have been timed to coincide with Australian Federal elections. The series also builds on the 1967, 1969 and 1979 Australian Political Attitudes Surveys. The Australian Election Studies aim to provide a long-term perspective on stability and change in the political attitudes and behaviour of the Australian electorate, and investigate the changing social bases of Australian politics as the economy and society modernise and change character. In addition to these long-term goals they examine the political issues prevalent in the election and assess their importance for the election result.

In some cases, questions are repeated in each survey so that trends can be observed over a long period of time. However, in each survey there are always new sets of questions or modules added to gauge public opinion on contemporary social and political issues in Australia.

The 2007 survey replicates many questions from previous studies, but also introduces a variety of new questions including a series of questions of Australia's social welfare system. Other sections cover the respondent's interest in the election campaign and politics, their past and present political affiliation, evaluation of parties and candidates, alignment with parties on various election issues, evaluation of the current economic situation, attitudes to a range of election issues including immigration, terrorism, taxation, unemployment, and interest rates, attitudes to issues relating to the environment and defence, and opinions on various social policy issues including abortion, equal opportunities, sex discrimination, and government assistance to Aborigines. Background variables include level of education, employment status, occupation, type of employer, position at workplace, trade union membership, sex, age, own and parents' country of birth, parents' political preferences, religion, marital status, income, and where applicable, the occupation, trade union membership and political preference of the respondent's spouse.

The breakdown of the 2007 survey sections is as follows:
Section A: The Election Campaign (15 questions)
Section B: Party Preference and Voting (26 questions)
Section C: Politicians and Government (12 questions)
Section D: Election Issues (21 questions)
Section E: Social Policy (12 questions)
Section F: Global Politics (21 questions)
Section G: Education and Work (7 questions)
Section H: Personal Background (22 questions)

The sample for this study was stratified, systematic and random. A sample of electors for all Australia was drawn from the Commonwealth Electoral Roll by the Australian Electoral Commission following the close of rolls for the 2007 election. The Commission supplied name and address information only, to be used only for this study. The sample was selected to be proportional to the population on a state by state basis.

The data is available in a variety of formats including SPSS Portable, Stata v.8, Stata v.7, Nesstar Publisher, NSDstat, DIF, DBase, Textfile, Delimited, SAS and Comma Separated Value file. The data can be downloaded in a zipped folder together with documentation in pdf or xml format.

Notes

SPSS Portable 2,594 KB; Stata v.8 2,516 KB; Stata v.7 2,510 KB; Nesstar Publisher 2,631 KB; NSDstat; DIF 2,646 KB; DBase 2,526 KB; Textfile 2,525 KB; Delimited 2,527 KB; SAS 2,561 KB; Comma Separated Value file 2,528 KB.

Created: 2007

Data time period: 2007 to 2007

This dataset is part of a larger collection

Click to explore relationships graph

159.10546,-9.22108 159.10546,-54.77722 112.92145,-54.77722 112.92145,-9.22108 159.10546,-9.22108

136.0134565,-31.999151