How Young Adults Want Their Country To Engage With the World
Though younger people tend to be more internationally oriented than older adults, they differ from one another over how they want their country to engage with the world.
Though younger people tend to be more internationally oriented than older adults, they differ from one another over how they want their country to engage with the world.
How are U.S. parents raising their children these days, and how does their approach compare with the way their own parents raised them?
Focus groups held across the two nations reveal the degree to which Americans and Britons see common challenges to local and national identity.
Today’s volume of immigrants is in some ways a return to America’s past.
The Pew Research Center design staff picks the data visualizations we created in 2014 that they considered the most challenging and explains the approach to presenting our data.
A sharp rise in the number of immigrants living in the U.S. in recent decades serves as a backdrop for the debate in Congress over the nation’s immigration policies. In 1990, the U.S. had 19.8 million immigrants. That number rose to a record 40.7 million immigrants in 2012, among them 11.7 million unauthorized immigrants.