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Since 1972, NORC’s General Social Survey has been one of the nation’s most rigorous and widely used sources of data on the attitudes, behaviors, and attributes of the American public. The 2022 GSS Cross-section data, featuring a new multi-mode design, is now available.
NORC launched the General Social Survey (GSS)—our longest-running, most respected project. In 1972, NORC received a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to build equity and accessibility within social science research.
The General Social Survey (GSS) is a sociological survey created in 1972 by the National Opinion Research Center (NORC) at the University of Chicago and funded by the National Science Foundation.
Since 1972, the General Social Survey (GSS) has been monitoring societal change and studying the growing complexity of American society. GSS Data Explorer, from NORC at the University of Chicago, makes it easier than ever to use the data collected by the GSS.
The General Social Survey (GSS) is a nationally representative survey of adults in the United States conducted since 1972. The GSS collects data on contemporary American society in order to monitor and explain trends in opinions, attitudes and behaviors.
The GSS, a biennial, nationally representative survey, has been conducted by NORC since 1972 to monitor societal change and study the growing complexity of American society. The new data provide a unique opportunity to study how the public’s attitudes and opinions may have shifted in recent years.
The General Social Survey (GSS) is a project of NORC at the University of Chicago, with principal funding from the National Science Foundation. Since 1972, the GSS has been monitoring societal change and studying the growing complexity of American society.
The GSS is a biennial, nationally representative survey that has been conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago since 1972 to monitor societal change and study the growing complexity of American society. The GSS is funded in large part by the National Science Foundation.
For the first time in its 50+ year history, the 2022 General Social Survey included in-person interviews, web self-administered surveys, and phone interviews. The results included in key trends reflect all of these modes except where noted, as certain variables may only be available in one mode.
In the five decades since its inception in 1971, the General Social Survey (GSS) project has prospectively recorded the current characteristics, backgrounds, behaviors, and attitudes of representative cross sections of American adults covering more than two generations and more than a century of birth cohorts.