Sentences with phrase «british social attitudes»

British public attitudes to education and children's services: part of NatCen's British Social Attitudes (BSA) Survey 2016.
The interim report of this project includes an analysis of British Social Attitudes Survey data from 1998 — 2007.
According to British social attitudes research carried out by the National Centre for Social Research (NatCen) in 2000, 56 % of respondents believed that people who lived together for some time «definitely» or «probably» had the same rights as married people.
For example, analysis of the British Social Attitudes Survey suggests that support for choice is counterbalanced by, among other things, opposition to vouchers, school diversity, and by strong support for the idea of sending children to the «nearest state school».
All respondents were originally interviewed as part of the random probability face - to - face 2015 British Social Attitudes survey.
In poll after poll, from British Social Attitudes to the Guardian ICM, three - quarters of voters say that the income gap is too wide.
Prof John Appleby highlighted figures showing that two - thirds of people are now either very or quite happy with the state - run health care, the largest proportion since the in - depth British Social Attitudes study began in 1983.
When the annual British Social Attitudes survey started in 1983, about 55 per cent of those questioned said they were very or quite satisfied with the way that the NHS is run.
It survives in spite of the Church of England commanding little public support, with only 16 % of the population professing to affiliation according to the 2013 British Social Attitudes survey (and only 1.4 % being in Church on any given Sunday, according to the Church's own attendance figures).
The most recent British social attitudes survey has found that 80 % of people believe the government should be responsible for ensuring that the long - term sick or disabled have enough to live on — much higher than the proportion of people who believe the government should ensure people have enough money to live on in retirement or if they are unemployed.
The 2010 British Social Attitudes Survey (the most recent one) records 65 % of 18 - 24 year olds as not belonging to any religion.
The long - running British Social Attitudes dataset shows how underlying beliefs and values can tend to be very stable over long periods.
The timing of the ESRC's Festival of Social Sciences could not be more pertinent, and the European Social Survey (ESS) event - «British social attitudes in European comparative context» — shows just how much the work of social scientists can offer us all.
«The Minister's views are deeply misguided and he is simply incorrect — only a minority of people in Britain are practising Christians and over half of the population sees itself as non-religious according to the latest British Social Attitudes survey.
BHA Chief Executive Andrew Copson commented, «It is highly ironic that the same day the Prime Minister repeats his claim that Britain is a Christian country, the new British Social Attitudes survey shows that most people are not religious — with a lower proportion being Christian than ever before.
Over the last 18 months I have been working with Dr Ben Clements of the University of Leicester, going through years of data from the British Election Study, British Social Attitudes and other smaller sources to try to answer that question.
It's also possible that the race is closer to the results of larger surveys like the British Social Attitudes survey which suggest that only around one - in - four voters are unequivocally in favour of withdrawal from the EU.
The British Social Attitudes Survey published earlier this year revealed that only 55 per cent of the public believed there was a democratic duty to vote.
26 % of men in paid employment have at some point changed their hours or working arrangements to look after someone (mainly children), with 9 % giving up work altogether for this purpose (British Social Attitudes Survey, 2002).
British Social Attitudes, the 23rd Report: perspectives on a changing society.
That's according to the latest British Social Attitudes survey.
Rosie: This year's British social attitudes survey put the proportion of Britains purporting to have no religion at a record high — about 53 per cent.
In May, the results of the British Social Attitudes survey showed that the number of people with no religion now outweighs the number of people who identify as Christians (See news, p11).
The information comes from an analysis of data from the annual British Social Attitudes survey and the biennial European Social Survey carried out by Professor Stephen Bullivant in his report, The «No Religion» Population of Britain.
For the first time, more than half of Anglicans now believe same - sex relationships are acceptable, according a new British Social Attitudes survey.

Not exact matches

Speaking after the documentary Baroness Sayeeda Warsi, the peer and former chairman of the Conservative Party, said British Muslims had made more progress in changing their attitudes on various social issues since they arrived in Britain in the 1950s than the Church of England and the Conservative Party had over the same period.
AAI, Adult Attachment Interview; AFFEX, System for Identifying Affect Expression by Holistic Judgement; AIM, Affect Intensity Measure; AMBIANCE, Atypical Maternal Behaviour Instrument for Assessment and Classification; ASCT, Attachment Story Completion Task; BAI, Beck Anxiety Inventory; BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; BEST, Borderline Evaluation of Severity over Time; BPD, borderline personality disorder; BPVS - II, British Picture Vocabulary Scale II; CASQ, Children's Attributional Style Questionnaire; CBCL, Child Behaviour Checklist; CDAS - R, Children's Dysfunctional Attitudes Scale - Revised; CDEQ, Children's Depressive Experiences Questionnaire; CDIB, Child Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines; CGAS, Child Global Assessment Schedule; CRSQ, Children's Response Style Questionnaire; CTQ, Childhood Trauma Questionnaire; CTQ, Childhood Trauma Questionnaire; DASS, Depression, Anxiety, Stress Scales; DERS, Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale; DIB - R, Revised Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines; DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; EA, Emotional Availability Scales; ECRS, Experiences in Close Relationships Scale; EMBU, Swedish acronym for Own Memories Concerning Upbringing; EPDS, Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale; FES, Family Environment Scale; FSS, Family Satisfaction Scale; FTRI, Family Trauma and Resilience Interview; IBQ - R, Infant Behaviour Questionnaire, Revised; IPPA, Inventory of Parent and Peer Attachment; K - SADS, Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for School - Age Children; KSADS - E, Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia - Episodic Version; MMD, major depressive disorder; PACOTIS, Parental Cognitions and Conduct Toward the Infant Scale; PPQ, Perceived Parenting Quality Questionnaire; PD, personality disorder; PPVT - III, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test, Third Edition; PSI - SF, Parenting Stress Index Short Form; RSSC, Reassurance - Seeking Scale for Children; SCID - II, Structured Clinical Interview for DSM - IV; SCL -90-R, Symptom Checklist 90 Revised; SCQ, Social Communication Questionnaire; SEQ, Children's Self - Esteem Questionnaire; SIDP - IV, Structured Interview for DSM - IV Personality; SPPA, Self - Perception Profile for Adolescents; SSAGA, Semi-Structured Assessment for the Genetics of Alcoholism; TCI, Temperament and Character Inventory; YCS, Youth Chronic Stress Interview; YSR, Youth Self - Report.
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