Australian Election Study, 1993

TypeCollection
TitleAustralian Election Study, 1993
Collection TypeDataset
Access PrivilegesAustralian Election Study
DOI - Digital Object Identifier10.4225/13/50BBFB8B3F1D5
Metadata LanguageEnglish
Data LanguageEnglish
Brief DescriptionThe Australian Election Study (AES) is a national, post-election, self-completion survey which collects data on the political opinions and behaviour of the Australian public. Each survey contains questions relating to the role of:

*Media and Media Exposure
*General Political Interest and Knowledge
*Perceptions of the Election Campaign
*Party Identification and Prior Voting History
*Parents' and Partner Partisanship
*Vote in the Election and Explanations for it
*Party Images
*Perceptions of the Major Party Leaders and the Content of their Public Images
*Election Issues
*Social Policy Issues
*Socio-demographic Measures

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

The 1993 study is the third in the series initiated in 1987, and builds on the data collected earlier in the 1967, 1969 and 1979 Australian Political Attitudes Surveys. The series provides a long-term perspective on stability and change in the political attitudes and behaviour of the Australian electorate, and investigates the changing social bases of Australian politics as the economy and society modernise and change character. In addition to these long-term perspectives it examines the political issues prevalent in the election and assesses 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 1993 survey replicates many questions from the 1987 and 1990 Australian Election Studies, but also introduces a variety of new questions including a section on foreign affairs and defence, and attitudes to Federal and State government. As in previous surveys, other sections covered 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 economic situation and economic policies, attitudes to a range of environmental issues, and attitudes to contemporary social policy issues including equal opportunity, censorship, migration, assistance for aborigines, abortion, criminal law, expenditure on social services, the monarchy and the Australian flag. Background variables covered include level of education, employment status, occupation, type of employer, position at workplace, trade union membership, sex, year and place of birth, parents' birthplaces, parents' political preferences, father's occupation, length of residence in state or territory, religion, marital status, number of children, income, and where applicable, the occupation, trade union membership and political preference of the respondent's spouse.

The breakdown of the 1993 survey sections is as follows:
Section A: The Election Campaign (11 questions)
Section B: Party Preference and Voting (12 questions)
Section C: The Candidates (8 questions)
Section D: Election Issues (11 questions)
Section E: Social Policy (10 questions)
Section F: The Environment (7 questions)
Section G: Foreign Affairs and Defence (11 questions)
Section H: Attitudes to Federal/State Government (12 questions)
Section I: Education and Work (7 questions)
Section J: Personal Background (20 questions)

For the 1993 study, a sample of electors for all Australia except South Australia was drawn from the Commonwealth Electoral Roll by the Australian Electoral Commission following the close of rolls for that year's election. The Commission supplied name and address information only, to be used only for this study. The South Australian sample was selected manually from the alphabetical microfiche list of electors available for that state in early February. The sample is stratified by State/Territory with an oversample in Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and Tasmania to ensure adequate numbers for separate State analyses as well as national analyses.

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.




Contact EmailIan.McAllister@anu.edu.au
Contact AddressSchool of Politics and International Relations
Research School of Social Sciences
Building 22, Haydon-Allen Building
The Australian National University
ACT 0200 Australia
Contact Phone Number+61 (0)2 6125 5553
Contact Fax Number+61 (0)2 6125 3051
Principal InvestigatorProfessor Ian McAllister
CollaboratorsRoger Jones
David Denemark
David Gow
Fields of Research1606 - Political Science
160601 - Australian Government and Politics
Socio-Economic Objective9402 - Government and Politics
KeywordsAustralia
Defence
Economic policy
Elections
Employment
Environment
International relations
Political parties
Politicians
Politics
Social issues
Social policy
Voting behaviour
Type of Research ActivityPure basic research
Date Coverage
Date FromDate To
19931993
Time Period1993
Geospatial Location
Location TypeLocation Value
DCMI Box notation conformant with iso 19139name=Australia; northlimit=-9.221084; southlimit=-54.777218; westlimit=112.921454; eastlimit=159.105459
Date of data creation1993
Year of data publication1993
Creator(s) for Citation
Given NameSurname
RogerJones
IanMcAllister
DavidDenemark
DavidGow
Publisher for CitationAustralian Data Archive
Publications

Identifier Type
Uniform Resource Identifier
Identifier Value
http://www.ada.edu.au/documents/aes-trends-pdf
Publication Title

Publication Reference
Ian McAllister and Sarah Cameron. Trends in Australian Political Opinion: results from the Australian Election Study, 1987-2013. Canberra: The Australian National University. 2014.


Related Websites
URLTitle
http://aes.anu.edu.au/Australian Election Study
http://ada.edu.au/ADAData/questionnaires/ADA.QUESTIONNAIRE.00763.pdf.zipQuestionnaire used in 1993 Australian Electoral Study survey
http://ada.edu.au/ADAData/codebooks/ADA.CODEBOOK.00763.rtf.zipAustralian Election Study Codebooks
http://politicsir.cass.anu.edu.au/staff/mcallister/pubs/Outline%20of%20AES%20surveys.pdfThe Australian Election Study: An Overview by Ian McAllister
http://aes.anu.edu.au/publicationsAustralian Election Study - related publications of interest
http://www.ada.edu.au/social-science/browse/politics-and-elections/australian-election-studyAustralian Data Archive catalog records
Access RightsConditions 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

Retention PeriodIndefinitely
Data SizeSPSS Portable 2,202 KB; Stata v.8 2,108 KB; Stata v.7 2,103 KB; Nesstar Publisher 2,156 KB; NSDstat; DIF 2,279 KB; DBase 2,148 KB; Textfile 2,146 KB; Delimited 2,131 KB; SAS 2,168 KB; Comma Separated Value file 2,132 KB
Status: Published
Published To:
- Australian National Data Service
- Australian National University
Identifier: anudc:3326
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