RT Research Data RT Statistics T1 Australian Survey of Social Attitudes, 2007 A1 Phillips, Timothy A2 Mitchell, Deborah A2 Tranter, Bruce A2 Clark, Juliet A2 Reed, Ken 1944- LA English PP Brisbane PB ADA Dataverse YR 2017 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1920717412 AB The 2007 Australian Survey of Social Attitudes (AuSSA) is the third in a biennial series that studies social attitudes and behaviour of Australian citizens for the Australian and international research community. AuSSA provides cross-sectional data on the social attitudes and behaviour of Australians, repeating a core questionnaire for each cross-section and fielding specific modules relevant to the changing needs of the social research community. AuSSA is Australia's official survey in the International Social Survey Program and regularly includes ISSP modules. AuSSA 2007 uses three survey instruments (Version A, B and C) and includes both the ISSP's Role of Government and Leisure Time and Sports modules. The 2007 Survey includes attitudes and behaviours that are organised into thirty-five categories: Describing Australia; Leisure Time and Sports; Environment; Role of Government; Crime and Criminal Justice; Risk; Law and Authority; Politics and Media; Culture; Magistrates Court; Geographical Identity; Retirement; Industrial Relations; Culture and Society; Private Health Insurance; Place of Residence; Collective Memory; Financial Future; Religious Attitudes; Ned Kelly; Aboriginality; Government Regulation; Engagement with Asia; Work; Homelessness; The Sacred; Gender; IVF Technology and Sex Selection; Loneliness; Global Networks; Shopping; Politics and Society; Terrorism; People in General; and Membership of Organisations. AuSSA 2007 also includes demographic and behavioural categories (Personal Background and Your Partner) that survey: sex, year born, income, education, employment, union membership, languages spoken, birthplace, household composition and religion. Also included are questions about the partner of the respondent: employment, highest-level of education and income. K1 Abortion K1 Attitudes K1 Crime K1 Culture K1 Defence K1 Economics K1 Education K1 Elections K1 Employment K1 Environment K1 Family K1 Health Insurance K1 Health Services K1 human relations K1 Income K1 Law K1 Living standards K1 Nationalism K1 Political Parties K1 Politics K1 Public Administration K1 Retirement K1 Social classes K1 Taxation K1 Terrorism K1 Unemployment K1 Values K1 Working conditions K1 Australia K1 Forschungsdaten K1 Statistik : 2007 : Australien DO 10.4225/87/1UPIZO