International Social Survey Programme

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Map of the 41 member nations of ISSP.
Map of the 41 member nations of ISSP.

The International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) is a collaboration between different nations conducting surveys covering topics which are useful for social science research. The ISSP researchers develop questions which are meaningful and relevant to all countries which can be expressed in an equal manner in different languages. The results of the surveys provide a cross-national and cross-cultural perspective to individual national studies.

[edit] History

The ISSP was founded in 1984 by research organizations from four countries:

[edit] Members

Flag of Australia Australia
Flag of Austria Austria
Flag of Belgium Belgium
Flag of Brazil Brazil
Flag of Bulgaria Bulgaria
Flag of Canada Canada
Flag of Chile Chile
Flag of Croatia Croatia
Flag of Cyprus Cyprus
Flag of the Czech Republic Czech Republic
Flag of Denmark Denmark
Flag of the Dominican Republic Dominican Republic
Flag of Finland Finland
Flag of France France
Flag of Germany Germany
Flag of Hungary Hungary
Flag of Ireland Ireland
Flag of Israel Israel
Flag of Japan Japan
Flag of Latvia Latvia
Flag of Mexico Mexico
Flag of the Netherlands Netherlands
Flag of New Zealand New Zealand
Flag of Norway Norway
Flag of the Philippines Philippines
Flag of Poland Poland
Flag of Portugal Portugal
Flag of Russia Russia
Flag of Slovakia Slovakia
Flag of Slovenia Slovenia
Flag of South Africa South Africa
Flag of South Korea South Korea
Flag of Spain Spain
Flag of Sweden Sweden
Flag of Switzerland Switzerland
Flag of the Republic of China Republic of China
Flag of Turkey Turkey
Flag of Uruguay Uruguay
Flag of the United Kingdom UK
Flag of the United States USA
Flag of Venezuela Venezuela

[edit] Australia

[edit] Austria

[edit] Belgium

  • The Administration of Planning and Statistics of the Ministry of Flanders.
  • Walloon Institute of Assessment, Forecasting and Statistics (IWEPS).
  • Department of Sociology, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven.

[edit] Brazil

  • Instituto Universitário de Pesquisas do Rio de Janeiro.

[edit] Bulgaria

  • The Agency for Social Analyses (ASA).

[edit] Canada

[edit] Chile

  • Centro de Estudios Publicos.

[edit] Croatia

  • Institute for social research.

[edit] Cyprus

[edit] Czech Republic

  • Institute of Sociology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic.

[edit] Denmark

[edit] Dominican Republic

  • Fundacion Global Democracia y Desarrollo (FUNGLODE).

[edit] Finland

  • Department of Sociology and Social Psychology, University of Tampere.
  • Statistics Finland.
  • Finnish Social Science Data Archive.

[edit] France

  • Centre for the Informationisation of Socio-Political Data (CIDSP).
  • Institute for Longitudinal Studies.
  • Quantitative Sociology Laboratory, National Institute for Statistics and Economic Studies (INSEE).
  • Centre for the Study of Social Change (CNRS and FNSP).

[edit] Germany

  • Centre for Survey Research and Methodology (Zentrum für Umfragen, Methoden und Analysen) (ZUMA).

[edit] Hungary

  • The Social Research Informatics Center (TÁRKI RT).

[edit] Ireland

[edit] Israel

[edit] Japan

  • NHK Broadcasting Culture Research Institute.

[edit] Latvia

  • Institute of Philosophy and Sociology.

[edit] Mexico

[edit] The Nederlands

[edit] New Zealand

[edit] Norway

  • Norwegian Social Science Data Services (NSD).

[edit] The Philippines

  • Social Weather Stations.

[edit] Poland

[edit] Portugal

[edit] Russia

  • The Levada Center.

[edit] Slovakia

  • The Institute for Sociology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences.

[edit] Slovenia

  • Public Opinion and Mass Communication Research Centre (CJMMK).

[edit] South Africa

  • Human Science Research Council.

[edit] South Korea

[edit] Spain

  • Análisis Sociológicos, Económicos y Políticos (ASEP).

[edit] Sweden

[edit] Switzerland

  • Swiss Information and Data Archive for the Social Sciences (SIDOS).

[edit] Taiwan

[edit] Turkey

  • Istanbul Policy Centre (IPC).

[edit] Uruguay

  • Department of Economics (deCON), Faculty of Social Sciences; Institute of Statistics (IEsta), Faculty of Economics and Administration, University of Uruguay.

[edit] United Kingdom

  • The National Centre for Social Research.

[edit] United States

[edit] Venezuela

  • Laboratorio de Ciencias Sociales (LACSO).

[edit] National pride survey

A survey of 34 countries was conducted and the results were released on June 27, 2006. The survey asked respondents to rate how proud they were of their country in ten areas:

  1. political influence
  2. social security
  3. the way their democracy works
  4. economic success
  5. science and technology
  6. sports
  7. arts and literature
  8. military, history
  9. fair treatment of all groups in society.

The United States ranked first in terms of overall national pride with Venezuela coming in a close second. Ireland, South Africa, and Australia came in third, fourth, and fifth respectively. The researchers commented that patriotism is a New World concept and that former colonies and newer nations tend to rank higher on the list.

Western European, East Asian, and former socialist countries tend to rank between the middle and bottom of the list. Countries formerly part of the Soviet Union are still struggling to find their own new national identity while cultural differences in East Asia could provide a possible explanation for their low ranking in the list. Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea ranked 18th, 29th, and 31st possibly due to the common belief that it is both bad luck and poor manners to be boastful.

Venezuela has been ranking high on the list due to President Hugo Chávez challenging the United States, particularly the Bush administration and generating a new sense of national pride and an emphasis on what it means to be Venezuelan.

[edit] External links


Languages