Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
About
Follow
My Account
Log in
View Account
Log out
Donate
Global Attitudes & Trends
Menu
Research Areas
Home
U.S. Politics
Media & News
Social Trends
Religion
Internet & Tech
Science
Hispanics
Global
Publications
Topics
Datasets
Question Search
Global Indicators
Methods
Experts
November 2, 2017
Transatlantic Dialogues: In Europe and North America, Publics More Supportive Than Experts of Direct Democracy
Support for direct democracy lower among experts than general public
Next
→
←
Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
Download
Support for direct democracy lower among experts than general public
Embed
Report Materials
Complete Report PDF
Topline
Full Report
Transatlantic Dialogues: In Europe and North America, Publics More Supportive Than Experts of Direct Democracy
Report Infographics
Public supports direct democracy more than experts; experts more strongly back representative democracy
Foreign policy experts more pessimistic about Trump than the general public
Representative democracy supported by experts and general public
Support for direct democracy lower among experts than general public
Minorities of experts and public favor leaving decision-making to experts
Few favor rule by strong leader, military
Foreign policy experts and publics lack confidence in Trump and Putin
Experts, publics see Trump as arrogant, intolerant and dangerous
Foreign policy experts more likely than public to think relations with U.S. will worsen
Experts say President Trump, declining trust are top challenges for transatlantic relationship
Experts more skeptical than public that U.S. would honor Article 5
Foreign policy experts see climate change, cyberattacks as greatest threats
Copyright 2018 Pew Research Center
About
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
Reprints, Permissions & Use Policy
Feedback
Careers