Automated Author Profile

Wong, Cara

University of Michigan. Institute of Social Research

Current S-Index

9.7

Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets

Average Dataset Index per Dataset

4.9

Average Dataset Index per dataset

Total Datasets

2

Total datasets for this author

Average FAIR Score

59.6%

Average FAIR Score per dataset

Total Citations

19

Total citations to the author's datasets

Total Mentions

0

Total mentions of the author's datasets

S-Index Interpretation

S-Index Over Time

Cumulative Citations Over Time

Cumulative Mentions Over Time

Datasets

National Politics Study, 2008 (Version: v1)

The 2008 election offers a rare opportunity to analyze a significant event in American history - the election of the first African American president. Because the longitudinal panel series began in 2004, prior to the emergence of President Obama as a serious political candidate and nominee, the results from these surveys provide a rare vehicle for comparing data over time on important demographic, political, and, of particular interest given President Obama's racial background, racial and ethnic issues related to vote choice and political behavior. The wealth of data obtained from this survey will benefit scholars for many years to come. This report provides a general overview of some of the key findings from the 2008 data collection. Topics covered include: demographic information of the population, work status, home ownership, political ideology, party identification, presidential choice, race relations, feeling thermometer data for a variety of political figures and relevant groups or organizations, and current events such as the Iraq War and same-sex marriage. Because differences among the racial and ethnic groups surveyed in this study are of political significance (Whites, African Americans, Hispanics, Asian Americans, and Caribbean Blacks), much of the data presented here is disaggregated by racial and ethnic group.

Authors

  • Jackson, James S. (James Sidney) ;
  • Hutchings, Vincent L. ;
  • Wong, Cara ;
  • Brown, Ronald
3 Citations0 Mentions60% FAIR1.9 Dataset Index
10.3886/icpsr36167.v12015

National Politics Study, 2008 (Version: v0)

The 2008 election offers a rare opportunity to analyze a significant event in American history - the election of the first African American president. Because the longitudinal panel series began in 2004, prior to the emergence of President Obama as a serious political candidate and nominee, the results from these surveys provide a rare vehicle for comparing data over time on important demographic, political, and, of particular interest given President Obama's racial background, racial and ethnic issues related to vote choice and political behavior. The wealth of data obtained from this survey will benefit scholars for many years to come. This report provides a general overview of some of the key findings from the 2008 data collection. Topics covered include: demographic information of the population, work status, home ownership, political ideology, party identification, presidential choice, race relations, feeling thermometer data for a variety of political figures and relevant groups or organizations, and current events such as the Iraq War and same-sex marriage. Because differences among the racial and ethnic groups surveyed in this study are of political significance (Whites, African Americans, Hispanics, Asian Americans, and Caribbean Blacks), much of the data presented here is disaggregated by racial and ethnic group.

Authors

  • Jackson, James S. (James Sidney) ;
  • Hutchings, Vincent L. ;
  • Wong, Cara ;
  • Brown, Ronald
16 Citations0 Mentions60% FAIR7.8 Dataset Index
10.3886/icpsr361672015