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- Home - ANES | American National Election Studies
ANES is a collaboration of Duke University, University of Michigan, The University of Texas at Austin, and Stanford University, with funding by the National Science Foundation
- American National Election Studies - Wikipedia
The American National Election Studies (ANES) are academically-run national surveys of voters in the United States, conducted before and after every presidential election
- American National Election Study (ANES) Series
The American National Election Study (ANES), begun in 1948, is the oldest continuous series of survey data investigating electoral behavior and attitudes in the United States
- American National Election Studies | Institute for Research in the . . .
The ANES is the longest time series of political data widely available to researchers, with data from every U S presidential election since Harry Truman’s unexpected victory in 1948
- Data Center - ANES | American National Election Studies
The Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) handles applications for ANES Restricted-Use Data and provides access to the data through their Virtual Data Enclave (VDE), a secure, virtual environment that is accessible from your own desktop computer
- The ANES at 75: Historical Trends
Consistency in the ANES study allows researchers to identify and track historical trends in polarization and partisan alignment over time
- 2024 Time Series Study - ANES | American National Election Studies
In addition to long-standing ANES content, the 2024 study added question batteries on more than fifteen new topic areas Nearly 20% of the survey items (questions) were new to the study as of 2024
- American National Election Studies | Institute for Social Research
Founded in 1948, the core mission of the American National Election Study (ANES) is to inform explanations of election outcomes by providing data that support rich hypothesis testing, maximize methodological excellence, measure many variables, and promote comparisons across people, contexts and time
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