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Which Values Are Important For Us?

May survey of CVVM SOÚ AV ČR focused on the matter of values and their importance for Czech people.

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Public Opinion on Rights of Homosexuals - May 2011

In May 2011, CVVM survey focused on public opinion on rights of gays and lesbians such as right to get married, right for registered partnership and right for children adoption.

 

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Romanies and Coexistence with Them in View of Czech Public – April 2011

April survey of CVVM focused on public attitude and public relationships between Czech population and Romany minority. Survey showed that more than four fifths of Czech citizens (81%) see living together of Romany and non-Romany population as bad in Czech Republic generally, and three fifths (59%) evaluate the coexistence as bad in a place where they live.

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Czech Public Opinion on Foreigners Living in the Czech Republic

In March 2011 CVVM survey investigated Czech public's views with regard to foreigners who live in the long term or permanently in the Czech Republic. 53 % of Czechs see foreign citizens living in the Czech Republic as a problem, 37 % claim the opposite. But, when people should consider their neighbourhood, not the Czech Republic as a whole country, 56 % think foreign citizens are not a problem.

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Tolerance to Different Social Groups

In March 2011 Public Opinion Research Centre focused on social distance among the major population and different social groups. Social distance was measured by a specific question: people should pick from a list of 15 different groups those, which they would not like to have as neighbours. The biggest distance was noticed towards drug addicts (89 % of Czechs would not want them to be their neighbours), people with criminal past (80%), people addicted to alcohol (79%) and also people with mental disease (63%).

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Czech Public's Attitudes to Foreigners II - March 2011

March survey of CVVM focused on public attitudes to foreigners. Majority (61 %) claimed that foreigners living in Czech republic should become conformed to czech cultural habits as much as possible. Another 34 % of informants said that foreigners should adapt to czech cultural habits just in some aspects. And 5 % said that foreigners should be allowed to live according to their habits.

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Attitudes of Czech Public Towards Employment of Foreigners - March 2011

March survey has dealt with a topic of employment of foreigners in Czech Republic. 55 % of Czechs think it is right to employ foreigners, 39 % express the opposite view. Support to employment of foreigners grows with degree of completed education and also with improving evaluation of living standard of respondent's household.

 

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Czech Public's Attitudes to Foreigners - March 2011

In March survey CVVM investigated Czech public's views with regard to foreigners who live in the long term or permanently in Czech Republic. 79% of Czechs think that incomers should have had the right to stay here in the long term under some conditions, 8% would support this right with no restricting conditions and 10% said that foreigners should not have any right to stay in the long term in the Czech Republic.

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Relation to Different National Groups Living in the Czech Republic - March 2011

In March 2011 CVVM investigated attitudes of Czech public to 15 national groups that are living in the Czech Republic in significant number. The most positive relation was observed to Slovaks, Poles, Greeks, Jews and Germans, the worst relation have Czechs to Roma people.

 

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Expectations for the Future and Fears of the Czech Public - December 2010

In December 2010, the CVVM survey focused on people's fears. Almost three fifths (59 %) of Czechs admitted that they were afraid of something. The most frequent were fear of unemployment, of fall of living standard and of a disease. Other questions concerned about the future of the personal life of citizens, the future of the Czech society and the future of the whole humankind. The majority was optimistic about their own future (69 %), but only 42 % of informants were optimistic about the Czech society and even less of them were optimistic about the future of the humankind (38 %).

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