The Politics of Timing: Extracting New Meaning from Public Opinion Data on Abortion Pubblico
Cohen, Sydney (Spring 2025)
Abstract
This paper builds on previous research assessing the congruence between public opinion and abortion policy, and specifically asks if attitudes on abortion timing, a new feature of the debate, are being captured by surveys. Two widely administered public opinion surveys, the General Social Survey (GSS) and American National Election Studies (ANES), ask abortion questions that do not have a timing dimension. To measure the timing assumptions made when respondents answer these questions, I created a survey that asked the GSS and ANES question along with a question that asks for abortion timing cutoffs in weeks. The results reveal correlations between certain GSS/ANES responses and gestational timing, and create crosswalks between the three question types.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Part 1: Introduction…………………………………………………………………..1-2
Part 2: A Brief History……………………………………………….………………2-4
Part 3: The New Abortion Debate……………………………………………….…..4-7
Part 4: Literature Review……………………………………………………..……..7-10
Part 5: Theory ……………………………………………….……………………..10-13
Part 6: This Study……………………………………………………………..……13-18
Part 7: Results ……………………………………………………………………...18-30
Part 8: Takeaways and Discussion………………………………………………….30-32
Part 9: Works Cited……………………………………………………………..….32-36
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