2002 American Perceptions of Artists Survey [New York]
Study Summary
Produced By: Princeton Survey Research Associates International, Princeton, NJ: Princeton Survey Research Associates International
Funding Agency/Sponsor: The Urban Institute
Author: The Urban Institute
Abstract (CPANDA): The 2002 American Perceptions of Artists Survey [New York], sponsored by the Urban Institute and conducted by Princeton Survey Research Associates International, was a benchmark study of the general public's opinions about the lifestyles and work of artists in the United States. The purpose of the study was to examine public perceptions of artists from several angles, including general interest in news or current events related to artists; awareness of different arts disciplines; artists' contributions to society and their local communities; personal work as an artist and interaction with artists. The study surveyed 501 adults in the New York metropolitan statistical area. Additional studies were conducted covering the continental United States, Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Houston, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington, D.C.
Methodology (CPANDA) : The 2002 American Perceptions of Artists Survey [New York] consists of 501 telephone interviews with adults, aged 18 or older, living in the New York metropolitan statistical area. Interviewing was conducted May 21 to August 18, 2002.
Cite the Study or Data Set[APA format]
The Urban Institute. 2002. 2002 AMERICAN PERCEPTIONS OF ARTISTS SURVEY [NEW YORK] [codebook file]. CPANDA ed. Princeton, NJ: Princeton Survey Research Associates International [producer and distributor].
Cite the Codebook [APA format]
The Urban Institute. 2004. AMERICAN PERCEPTIONS OF ARTISTS SURVEY 2002 [NEW YORK] [codebook file]. CPANDA ed. Princeton, NJ: Cultural Policy and the Arts National Data Archive [producer and distributor].