Informe De Prensa Estudio Mundial De Valores Chile

Wednesday 25 April 2001

Chile World Values Survey Report

25 April 2001

The Worldwide Study of Values is held every five years of national representative samples in more than 60 societies in the 6 continents. The objective of the study is to observe the evolution of changes in values in countries and regions of the world.

The coordination and distribution of the data are of responsibility of the ISR for Institute Social Research of the University of Michigan, under the direction of Ronald Inglehart.

The study has its origin in the European Study of Values, held for the first time in 1981. This study has generated more than 300 publications in 16 languages and lead the extended world comparison study we conduct today.

Chile held the first wave of the study in 1990, the second in 1996 and now we are presenting the third wave held in 2000. These three measurements allow us to track the changes in values undergone by the Chilean society from the inauguration of the democracy in 1990, with the same methodology and the same questions.

Areas covered

  • Family
  • Friends
  • Work
  • Leisure time
  • Religion
  • Sexual attitude
  • Politics
  • Institutions
  • Society
  • Civic duty

Technical details

MORI Chile interviewed 1,200 adults of both sexes across 29 cities with more than 40,000 inhabitants in regions I-X. Fieldwork was between 9-19 November 2000.

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