wvs_usa_abortion | R Documentation |
Attitudes on the Justifiability of Abortion in the United States (World Values Survey, 1982-2011)
Description
A data set on attitudes about the justifiability of abortion in the United States based on World Values Survey responses recorded across six waves (from 1982 to 2011). I assembled this data frame probably around 2014 and routinely use it for in-class illustration about regression, post-estimation simulation, quantities of interest, and how to think about modeling a dependent variable that is on a 1-10 scale, but has curious heaping patterns.
Usage
wvs_usa_abortion
Format
A data frame with 10387 observations on the following 16 variables.
wvsccode
the country code for the United States (a numeric constant)
wave
the survey wave
year
the survey year corresponding to the survey wave
aj
the justifiability of abortion on a 1-10 scale (1 = never justifiable; 10 = always justifiable)
age
the age of the respondent in years
collegeed
a dummy variable that equals 1 if the respondent graduated from college
female
a dummy variable that equals 1 if the respondent is a woman
unemployed
a dummy variable that equals 1 if the respondent is unemployed
ideology
the ideological self-placement of the respondent on a 1-10 scale (1 = furthest to the left; 10 = furthest to the right)
satisfinancial
the respondent's financial satisfaction with his/her life (1 = most dissatisfied; 10 = most satisfied)
postma4
the post-materialist index for the respondent (-1 = materialist; 0 = mixed, 1 = post-materialist)
cai
the child autonomy index, which ranges from -2 to 2
trustmostpeople
can most people be trusted (1) or "(you) never can be too careful" (0)
godimportant
the importance of God to the respondent on a 1-10 scale (1 = God is not at all important; 10 = God is most important)
respectauthority
would more respect for authority be a welcome change to the United States?
nationalpride
a dummy that equals 1 if the respondent is very proud to be an American.
Details
Data come from the World Values Survey. Note that the college education variable
is curiously NA
until the third survey wave. The child autonomy index ranges from
-2 to 2 where increasing values indicate that children should learn determination and
independence over obedience and religious faith. The respectauthority
variable is coded
where -1 means the respondent believes greater respect for authority in the United States
as a future change to the country would be a bad thing. 0 means the respondent doesn't mind
such a change. 1 = the respondent believes it would be a good thing.