Pakistani Public Differs from Taliban on Education of Girls
In a 2009 survey, 87% of Pakistanis said it was equally important for girls and boys to be educated.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
In a 2009 survey, 87% of Pakistanis said it was equally important for girls and boys to be educated.
The use of social media is becoming a feature of political and civic engagement for many Americans. A new report examines who is more likely to use social media to express their views, react to others’ postings, follow candidates and ‘like’ and share others’ content.
Six-in-ten say U.S. troops should be removed from Afghanistan as soon as possible.
In 2010, women with full-time or salaried jobs had a median income of $669 a week, compared to $824 for men.
Fully 54% of women say abortion is a very important issue to their vote, compared with 36% of men — a gap of 18 points.
Young adults are more likely than other age groups to say they are not affiliated with a religion.
A majority of Latino voters say education is an extremely important issue in this year’s election.
Scott Keeter, Director of Survey Research, answers questions about the factors behind the growing partisan gap in American politics.
Two-thirds of young women ages 18 to 34 rate career high on their list of life priorities, compared with 59% of young men.
About six-in-ten disagree with the idea that “we should make every possible effort to improve the position of blacks and other minorities, even if it means giving them preferential treatment.”
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