67% of Americans perceive a rise in extreme weather, but partisans differ over government efforts to address it
46% of U.S. adults say the area where they live has had an extreme weather event over the past 12 months.
46% of U.S. adults say the area where they live has had an extreme weather event over the past 12 months.
New findings reveal exactly how the United States is more divided than the other 16 advanced economies surveyed.
Wide majorities in most of the 17 advanced economies surveyed say having people of many different backgrounds improves their society, but most also see conflicts between partisan, racial and ethnic groups.
Republican- and Democratic-led states alike already require hundreds of thousands of citizens to be vaccinated against various diseases.
Latinos broadly support an array of policy measures to address climate change and other environmental issues.
Social hostilities around the world involving religion declined in 2019 to the lowest level in five years.
Social hostilities involving religion, including violence and harassment against religious groups by private individuals and groups, declined in 2019, according to Pew Research Center’s 12th annual study of global restrictions on religion, which examines 198 countries and territories.
There is a wide partisan split on the fairness of the House committee’s probe.
Veterans and non-veterans in the United States largely align when it comes to the decision to pull all troops out of Afghanistan.
Currently, 55% of U.S. adults express at least some support for the Black Lives Matter movement, unchanged from a year ago.