Skip to Content

Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World

Terrorism Subscribe to Terrorism Publications

09.05.02

Temporary Turnabout: Religion and the Crisis

In March, 2001, the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press and the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life began a partnership to conduct a series of national public opinion surveys on religious attitudes. With the events of September 11, we accelerated our agenda to investigate how religious beliefs shaped public reactions [...]

09.05.02

One Year Later: New Yorkers More Troubled, Washingtonians More On Edge

Introduction Over the past year, many of the dramatic reactions of the public to the events of Sept. 11 have slowly faded. The spike in trust in government is mostly gone, the public once again is highly critical the of the news media, and even President Bush’s approval ratings have come down from the stratosphere.(1) [...]

06.10.02

President Bush Distanced From 9/11 Blame

by Andrew Kohut for America Online

06.09.02

Public’s News Habits Little Changed by September 11

Introduction and Summary The public’s news habits have been largely unaffected by the Sept. 11 attacks and subsequent war on terrorism. Reported levels of reading, watching and listening to the news are not markedly different than in the spring of 2000. At best, a slightly larger percentage of the public is expressing general interest in [...]

03.07.02

Public Opinion Six Months Later

Nationhood, Internationalism Lifted

01.01.02

Press Shines at a Dark Moment

by Andrew Kohut for Columbia Journalism Review

Topics