Posts Tagged Social attitudes

Social Trends

“Social Trends draws together social and economic data from a wide range of government departments and other organisations to provide a comprehensive guide to UK society today, and how it has been changing. Data is presented clearly in a combination of tables, figures and text providing the ideal tool for researching life and lifestyles in the UK. From 2010 Social Trends moved exclusively online allowing it to reach a wider audience and bring many new opportunities to develop and enhance the presentation of statistics while retaining quality and value.

Social Trends is aimed at a wide audience: policy makers in the public and private sectors, service providers, people in local government, journalists and other commentators, academics and students, schools and the general public.

Social Trends covers a range of subjects including:

  • Health
  • Education
  • Population
  • Lifestyles and social participation”

Current Releases

Population (Published 14 April 2011)

Households and Families (Published 14 April 2011)

Housing (Published 10 February 2011)

Transport (Published 3 February 2011)

Lifestyles and Social Participation (27 January 2011)

 

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Scottish Social Attitudes Survey 2010: Sustainable Places and Greenspace Research Findings No. 7/2010

These research findings were published in July 2010.

“This report summarises the key findings and conclusions from a study exploring public perceptions of their local area and greenspace. The report is intended to inform policies on the development of ‘Sustainable Places’ – places where people want to live and that support people’s physical and mental wellbeing. It is based on data from the 2009 Scottish Social Attitudes survey, and explores the key features that make somewhere a good place to live, the particular role of greenspace in making somewhere a place people want to live, and the relationship between perceptions of local greenspace and health, subjective wellbeing and social trust.

Main Findings

■ The most commonly-mentioned feature that makes somewhere a good place to live was the area being quiet and peaceful, chosen by 50% of people as either their first or second choice.

■ However, when asked what things were most in need of improvement locally, people were more likely to mention features associated with service provision or economic conditions. The top five choices were availability of good jobs locally, good public transport, quality of places for children to play, good quality affordable housing and condition of pavements/footpaths.

■ Over half (56%) of people in Scotland rated their level of satisfaction with their local area as 8 or above (on a scale of 0 to 10). Below average levels of satisfaction were associated (independently of deprivation and income) with feeling that an area is not nice to walk around in and feeling bad about the availability of green and pleasant places to walk or sit.

■ Feeling disempowered, unable to do much about improving things in the local area, is linked to feeling dissatisfied with the local area: 39% of those who agreed that it is difficult for them to improve their area were dissatisfied with their area compared with only 15% of those who disagreed.

■ Two-thirds (66%) of people in Scotland live within a 5-minute walk of their local greenspace. However, only 53% of people in the most deprived areas of Scotland live within a 5-minute walk of their local greenspace, compared with 67% of people in the least deprived areas of Scotland.

■ There is a strong link between the distance people live from their local greenspace and how often they use it. Half (50%) of those who live less than a 5-minute walk away from their local greenspace visit it more than once a week, compared with only 16% of those who live more than a 10-minute walk away.

■ In terms of what people think makes a good local park or greenspace, features that require more active management, such as being well maintained, play facilities, lighting and security and good paths, were chosen more often than features relating to the overall ambience of the area, such as having lots of plants, trees or flowers, being peaceful and having attractive views.

■ A third (33%) of people are very satisfied with the quality of their local greenspace; 46% are fairly satisfied.

■ Being very satisfied with the quality of your local greenspace is associated with better self-assessed health, higher life satisfaction, greater social trust and a higher sense of community cohesion. 43% of those who are very satisfied with their local greenspace say their health is very good compared with 26% of those who are neither satisfied or dissatisfied or fairly or very dissatisfied.”

The full version of these research findings are also available.

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Scottish Social Attitudes Survey 2009: Public Attitudes to Drugs and Drug Use in Scotland

These research findings were published on 25th May 2010.

“This report summarises the key findings from a report exploring public attitudes towards illegal drugs and drug misuse in Scotland, based on data from the 2009 Scottish Social Attitudes survey. It focuses in particular on attitudes towards opiate misuse, and on views of potential policy responses to this. However, it also places such attitudes in the context of wider views and experiences of illegal drugs.”

Main Findings
■ Support for legalising cannabis – which increased in Scotland (as in the rest of the UK) in the late 1990s – has fallen considerably in more recent years, from 37% in 2001 to 24% in 2009. Attitudes towards prosecution for possession of cannabis for personal use also hardened between 2001 and 2009.
■ Most people said taking cocaine occasionally is wrong – 76% rated it as 4 or 5 on a scale where 5 meant ‘very seriously wrong’.
■ 45% of people agreed that ‘Most people who end up addicted to heroin have only themselves to blame’, while just 27% disagreed.
■ Around half (53%) disagreed that ‘most heroin users come from difficult backgrounds’ (29% agreed).
■ Among those in paid employment, around half (47%) said they would be ‘very’ or ‘fairly comfortable’ working alongside someone they knew had used heroin in the past, while around 1 in 5 would be uncomfortable.
■ Just a quarter (26%) said they would be comfortable with someone who was receiving help to stop using heroin moving near to them, while half (49%) would be uncomfortable.
■ There was no public consensus on what should be the top government priority for tackling heroin use in Scotland – 32% chose ‘tougher penalties for those who take heroin’, 32% ‘more help for people who want to stop using heroin’ and 28% ‘more education about drugs’.
■ Just 16% agreed that people who possess heroin for personal use should not be prosecuted (compared with 34% for cannabis).
■ Public support for providing clean needles to injecting drug users fell from 62% in 2001 to 50% in 2009.
■ Opinion on educating young people about safer drug use was split – 44% agreed that young people should be given information about how to use drugs more safely, but 40% disagreed.
■ Four out of five (80%) agreed that ‘the only real way of helping drug addicts is to get them to stop using drugs altogether’. However, 29% agreed that ‘most heroin users can never stop using drugs completely’, while 27% said they neither agreed nor disagreed or did not know.
■ 63% disagreed that ‘Someone who has been a heroin addict can never make a good parent, even if their drug problems are in the past’.
■ Around two thirds (64%) said that young children of heroin users should be placed into temporary foster care until the parents stop taking heroin. A further 1 in 5 believed the child should stay at home while the family receives help from social workers and just 8% said the child should be permanently adopted by another family.

The full report is also accessible online.

Image taken from www.softchalk.com

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Scottish Social Attitudes Survey 2009: Core Module – Attitudes to Government, the Economy and Public Services in Scotland – Research Findings

This report was published on 11th May 2010.

“This report summarises the key findings from a report exploring trends in attitudes to government, the economy and public services. It examines both longer term-trends in public opinion since the start of devolution in 1999 and changes in attitudes over the shorter period since the last SSA took place in 2007.”

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Scottish Social Attitudes Survey 2009

This report was published on 22nd March 2010.

This report looks at our perceptions of antisocial behaviour in Scotland. Is antisocial behaviour really as widespread a problem as the media would have us believe? And how does our experience of antisocial behaviour affect our attitudes to young people?

The report focuses on 3 important questions:

  1. What are the key influences on people’s attitudes to ASB?
  2. What are people’s attitudes to community involvement in tackling ASB?
  3. What are people’s views about young people and their role in committing ASB?

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Scottish Social Attitudes Survey 2007: Subjective Well-being

This Research Report was published today by the Scottish Government. It discusses “the topline findings on subjective well-being levels in Scotland and compares the findings with other countries across Europe. It also explores the relationship between socio-demographic data and well-being.”

“SSA 2007 demonstrated that subjective well-being – a person’s assessment of their situation – is high in Scotland. When asked how happy and satisfied they are with their life as a whole, most people scored 8 on a scale of 0 to 10. People were equally satisfied with their family or personal life and their general standard of living. Job satisfaction was lower (7) but it was still the case that more people were satisfied with their job than were dissatisfied with it.”

What a contented bunch we are! They probably didn’t ask how happy the folk were in the Saturday night taxi queue outside Central Station, right enough. That might have skewed their results somewhat.

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