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Americans and the World Digest
   
 
Comprehensive Analysis of Polling on International Topics
   
Welcome to the Americans and the World website, a source of comprehensive information on US public opinion on international issues. The site includes The Digest, which provides comprehensive analyses of polling on various international topics. Over the coming months we will periodically release analyses of US public opinion on other international topics.
THE DIGEST
 
 

Global Issues

Regional Issues

Poll of 18 African Countries Finds All Support Democracy

Poll of 9 Major Nations Finds All, including US, Reject World System Dominated by Single Power in Favor of Multipolarity

U.S. Russians and Americans Agree Iran is Trying to Develop Nuclear Weapons, But Disagree on Economic Sanctions

Russians Positive on China's Foreign Policy, Economic Model, Negative on US Policies, Bush

Canadian and Dutch Publics Feeling Stretched By Expanded Military Role in Afghanistan

U.S. Russians and Americans Agree Iran is Trying to Develop Nuclear Weapons, But Disagree on Economic Sanctions

Russians Positive on China's Foreign Policy, Economic Model, Negative on US Policies, Bush

Canadian and Dutch Publics Feeling Stretched By Expanded Military Role in Afghanistan

Searches for polling data that appear on “Americans and the World” are done with the aid of the IPOLL Database at the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at the University of Connecticut.
Articles Published Elsewhere

Articles
Author(s)
Publishers
Public Opinion on Foreign Policy:
The Multilateral Public that Perceives Itself as Unilateral
Alexander Todorov
Published by the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs
I.M. Destler

from the 2001 Rowman & Littlefield publication
(for the Council on Foreign Relations)
From:
The Real and the Ideal: Essays on International Relations in Honor of Richard H. Ullman

Vox Americani
An interview with the American public
Steven Kull
(Foreign Policy, September/October 2001)
"The Myth of the Reactive Public"
American Public Attitudes on Military Fatalities in the Post-Cold War Period
Steven Kull and
Clay Ramsay
From the March 2001 Routledge publication
Public Opinion and the International Use of Force
Edited by Philip Everts and Pierangelo Isernia.