The World Values Survey in Great Britain: Examining Values Polarisation in Britain and the World

Lead Research Organisation: King's College London
Department Name: The Policy Institute

Abstract

Values are the basic principles that inform the judgements we make about what is important in life. They are reflected in our attitudes, judgements, standards of behaviour and determine what we care about. Since 1981, the World Values Survey (WVS) has tracked the evolution of values, attitudes, beliefs and behaviour on topics that range from cultural identity, migration, interpersonal trust, empathy and human tolerance to media usage, political interest and views on science, technology and environmental protection. Today, WVS is one of the largest and most used social surveys in the world. Its global coverage, capturing the views of almost 400,000 people in over 110 countries, has enabled the study of interactions between different values across diverse national circumstances and to monitor how values are changing.

WVS fieldwork is conducted in waves every five years. Great Britain has participated in two waves, conducting interviews in 1998 and 2005. Since then, the nation has experienced profound change, from the effects of the financial crisis through to the political volatility following the vote to leave the EU. Understanding whether underlying values within Britain, and between Britain and other nations, have grown apart or come together matters. We are told that the population is split along a variety of fault lines, be it by how we voted in the EU referendum, where we live, our age or our level of education. Whether these differences are real or imagined, fixed or shifting, is of immense consequence. Participating in Wave 7 of WVS offers a timely opportunity to explore where coherent or fractured identities have formed, how deeply and whether these trends are distinctive to other countries.

Conducting fieldwork in May 2020, this grant will not only generate a high-quality data resource at a decisive point in the nation's history, soon after the UK intends to leave the EU; the project will conduct new analyses that test whether values, attitudes and beliefs in Britain and elsewhere are polarising, to help shape policy decisions and nuance public discussion about division in Britain against a global context.

The project's objectives have four core applications and benefits:

1. Thousands of researchers use WVS data as a basis for their work, along with governments, journalists, international agencies and others. Our primary objective is to ensure that fieldwork for Great Britain is conducted in 2020 to generate a high-quality data resource that can be accessed and reused, without restriction, by users around the world.

2. Research into division in Britain's values, attitudes and beliefs has largely been issue specific or focused on identities formed around Brexit. The broad subject and country coverage of WVS presents the opportunity to apply a cross-disciplinary, globally-comparative lens to the topic of polarisation, furthering understanding of how individually divisive issues intersect, inform identity and become mutually reinforcing.

3. Grouping populations by their values or morals can reveal a fuller spectrum between the attention-grabbing extremities of political identity. We will explore a range of segmentations that provide alternative models for groupings in the British population based on morals or values, moving beyond divisive models such as Leave/Remain, Somewhere/Anywhere, Open/Closed. To support this aim, we will add a set of questions on Moral Foundations Theory.

4. There is clear concern within UK government about growing division in society; yet understanding of where the most urgent issues lie is poorly evidenced and rarely considered against the global context. Our fourth objective, to build consensus around where diverging values have implications for UK policy, will deliver a clear benefit to policymakers. Drawing on input from subject and policy experts, we will collaboratively develop recommendations to help improve outcomes around the most divisive or unifying policy areas.

Planned Impact

We have identified three objectives for our Impact and Engagement strategy, which are described in more detail in the Pathways to Impact:

1. To raise awareness and encourage reuse of WVS and EVS datasets;
2. To collaboratively identify the challenge that polarisation presents for UK policy and to support policy change that responds to divisions, continuity and convergence in the population's values;
3. To contribute to a more nuanced public understanding and debate around polarisation in Britain.

In order to deliver on these objectives we will work with three sets of stakeholders/beneficiaries:

1. Existing and new WVS users. Thousands of people around the world use WVS as a basis for their work, from academics and students working across a huge range of disciplinary contexts, to governments, journalists, international agencies such as the World Bank (World Bank Group, 2018; World Bank Group, 2016), the UN (UNESCWA, 2018; UN, DESA, 2016) and the World Health Organization (WHO, 2013), and a range of others. Moreover, there is clear demand from the UK government for Britain to rejoin the WVS, with expressions of interest from the Department of Digital, Culture, Media & Sport, Department for Housing, Communities and Local Government, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, and the Cabinet Office (see Case for Support). We will engage with existing and new WVS users through our series of events and policy reports, which will present accessible summaries of the trends and interpretation of the data, alongside recommendations developed collaboratively as part of the Policy Labs (see point 2. and Pathways to Impact).

2. UK policymakers, particularly those in national and local Government with a Social Policy remit. There is clear concern within the UK government about growing division in society; however, there remains little consensus on the specific nature or extent of division or convergence - be it within Britain, or between Britain and other nations and cross-national blocs (not only the EU, but also the Commonwealth and traditional Anglo-Saxon allies). A core impact of this project will be to build a more nuanced and data-driven political debate about shifts in the underlying values of different nations, and its implications for policymaking. Given the potential breadth of issues and policy areas that may interact to contribute to polarisation, we will convene a broad range of subject experts, policy specialists and public servants in our series of Policy Labs, which will focus on recent shifts in values (RQ1), generational variance (RQ2) and new segmentation approaches (RQ4), with an international focus (RQ3) running through each. These groups will fundamentally influence the design and direction of the project's findings, providing a vehicle to co-develop actionable recommendations that, in the longer term, we see as giving rise to policies that are responsive to the divisions and common ground in the values of the population. Our ability to execute and truly embed our recommendations within government will be supported by a partnership with the Behavioural Insights Team, who will support the dissemination of findings through its cross-government policy networks.

3. Media. Traditional news media and social media can play a reinforcing role in the perception of polarisation (Curran, Gaber & Petley, 2019; Sunstein, 2017; Fiorina, 2010). In response, we aim to build a close collaborative partnership with a media partner to help build a more nuanced public discussion around, and understanding of, polarisation. We aim to formalise a relationship with a media partner for the duration of the research and have already begun discussions with the Senior Commissioning Editor of the BBC World Service. This partnership will enable us to co-create a stream of content that offers a more balanced representation of how the population is growing together and apart, with the view to shifting the tone of the prevailing narrative.
 
Description In this project, we set out to achieve the following four objectives. Below we report on what has been discovered or achieved in relation to each objective to date:

1. To ensure that Great Britain rejoins the World Values Survey (WVS). Despite challenges arising from conducting fieldwork during the COVID-19 pandemic, data were successfully collected (as a result of continued flexibility on extensions from ESRC), exceeding expectations of sample size - and are now available for other researchers to use as part of wave seven of the WVS (https://www.worldvaluessurvey.org/WVSDocumentationWV7.jsp). We had initially planned to achieve a nationally representative sample of 1,800 interviews in Great Britain. However, we fundraised an additional £246,000 to cover the cost of boosts to 500 interviews in Scotland and 400 in Wales, as well as 400 additional interviews in Northern Ireland. In the field, we also exceeded all of these targets, with an achieved sample of 3,056 interviews (1,645 interviews in England, 523 in Scotland, 446 in Northern Ireland and 436 in Wales). Alongside mainstage fieldwork, we also completed a parallel round of online data collection with YouGov, with a representative sample of 1,005 adults in Britain.

Our objective was not just to ensure that data were collected, but also that they are used. As detailed elsewhere in this submission, we have raised the profile of WVS data in the UK significantly through a targeted and modular media campaign, direct engagement with policy makers, high-profile events, a website that enables people to explore the data in a more user-friendly way, and engaging with academic communities at conferences such as IPSA and WAPOR, along with our own one-day conference focused on polarisation.


2. To undertake cross-cutting analysis that tracks shifts in values to improve understanding of polarisation in Great Britain, and between Britain and other nations. Through a series of descriptive data reports looking at values change in the UK relative to other nations, we have confirmed several important trends. The UK has undergone a widespread liberalisation of social attitudes in recent decades, with considerable proportions of the population now highly tolerant of different behaviours and groups in society. We are also seeing increasing levels of trust towards 'out-groups', while showing internationally low levels of confidence in key institutions; and have shifted from being one of the most hostile nations in Europe towards immigration, to being one of the most positive. These findings, along with several others, have been reported in nine high-profile data reports, featured prominently at a launch event in June 2023, and receiving major media interest.

Building on these trends, we have explored differences in levels of confidence in institutions and attitudes towards democracies and authoritarian systems of government between generational groups. We have conducted age, period, and cohort (APC) analysis, which explores whether changes over time can be attributed to ageing effects, changes in an overall population over time (period), or differences between birth groups (cohorts). Our results show no significant differences in support for democracy (both in the UK and other developed nations) between generational groups. This is despite often cited warnings about 'Gen Z' or 'Millennials' moving away from democracy as an ideal. We do, however, find differences between cohorts in the UK around satisfaction levels with the way the country is currently being run, and in confidence placed in certain institutions (eg the police, courts, or parliament). Our APC results are currently being written up into a journal article, and have been presented as part of the WAPOR 76th Annual Conference.

We have looked at the relationship between countries' values and their international policy approaches in three domains: migration, international security, and trade. Our analyses reveal that a country's values and attitudes are significantly associated with its policies. Firstly, analysing migration policy profiles, we show that countries whose populations are more supportive of inclusive immigration policy approaches, and who see the "benefits" of migration outstripping its "costs" are more likely to materially be more open to immigrants in their policies. Secondly, in a case study of the voting patterns on the UN resolution on the Russian aggression to Ukraine, we show that countries whose populations hold stronger self-expressive and secular values were more likely to support the resolution. Thirdly, analysing UK trade data, we find that the UK exports more to countries when their values align.


3. To explore innovative approaches to segmentation that yield new models for understanding population groupings across a spectrum of socio-political identities. In this project, we have fielded and analysed the Moral Foundations Questionnaire (MFQ) for the first time in the UK using a high-quality random probability sample. Our analysis confirmed that the newly developed MFQ-2 questionnaire can be used to measure different moral intuitions in the UK. We also find support that moral intuitions can both increase polarising tendencies and provide a unifying role in individuals when looking at attitudes towards issues of environmental protection, acceptance of LGBTQ minorities and immigration, and support for authoritarianism, nationalism and Brexit. We presented our findings at the 27th IPSA World Congress in July 2023, and submitted a journal article to the British Journal of Politics and International Relations (currently under review).

We have additionally used the MFQ to conduct a segmentation of the UK (using Latent Class Analysis (LCA)), that explores how differences in values and attitudes group individuals into different clusters. Our results show that questions around moral values and attitudes can be used to create more nuanced understandings of the socio-political differences between groups and their identities. We see significant differences in values towards moral foundations of loyalty, authority and purity between individuals; however, foundations focused on care, equality and proportionality had less discriminatory value between respondents, indicating that a common ground might exist between groups in the relative value of these moral priorities across the UK public.

In preparation for our final Policy Lab, we have also begun to analyse differences between the UK nations (ie England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales) to highlight which nations are coming together or growing apart from each other. Emerging findings, which we have presented to Union and Devolution team at DLUHC, show that while there is cohesion across nations on economic attitudes, with people embracing more progressive views in favour of redistribution and state intervention in the economy, social attitudes remain more divided. In particular, respondents in Northern Ireland are less accepting of homosexuality, abortion, and divorce, compared to the other UK nations.


4. To build consensus around polarisation trends and understand the implications of these shifts for UK policy. Our main mechanism for understanding the implications of values shifts for UK policy are three Policy Labs - the first of which will be delivered on 19th March 2024, and will therefore be reported in our 2025 submission. However, we have engaged with policy stakeholders from the outset to shape the focus and design of the Policy Lab series and our wider impact strategy through our partnership with the Behavioural Insights Team and Advisory Board, our relationships with boost funders (including the Cabinet Office and Northern Ireland Office), and ad hoc consultations. All of these touch points have enabled us to build awareness of how we can bring the data most effectively to answer live policy questions, particularly around issues of cohesion and the state of the Union.
Exploitation Route - Data collected are freely available for reuse
- Data reports
- Journal articles
- Engagement via Policy Labs
Sectors Communities and Social Services/Policy

Other

URL https://www.uk-values.org/
 
Description While it is still early to report on impact, we have made clear progress towards achieving the three impact objectives outlined in our proposal. 1. To raise awareness about and encourage the use and reuse of WVS and EVS datasets. Through an ambitious and targeted media and engagement strategy, outlined below, we have increased visibility of WVS data both in the media and among policy communities. Since we began releasing data reports in February 2023, we have generated a consistent presence for WVS in UK newspapers - with references to WVS in UK newspapers in the last year alone accounting for almost two in five all-time references to the study (1995-2024) (Nexis). Beyond direct citations of the research in newspapers, we have also seen a wider ripple effect of influencing public debate. This ranges from the data appearing as the basis for a feature on people's priorities in life on Lauren Laverne's 6 Music's People's Playlist (September 2023) to being cited by Dame Louise Casey - who in 2023 led a high-profile independent review into the standards of behaviour and internal culture of the Metropolitan Police Service - in a conference address to senior stakeholders in law enforcement in the autumn of 2023. In one-to-one consultations with policymakers, we have also heard anecdotal evidence of the data reports being used in the day-to-day work of government: "It's incredibly valuable to have as a resource within government. Quite literally, just yesterday I was sharing your work - the World Values Survey work - among colleagues looking for a greater depth of understanding of broad social patterns within the UK and how they're changing over time, and how the UK might compare to other countries." (DLUHC consultation) In consultation, former Secretary of State for International Development and Labour Candidate for East Lothian, Douglas Alexander, observed that what has contributed to the success of our approach has been drawing out compelling, widely accessible stories from the data to secure its influence in public debate: "there's been a really effective job in showing material that either makes you think about a common, a familiar problem in an unfamiliar way, or that's just brand new and definitive research - and that's quite a precious commodity" (Douglas Alexander, consultation). 2. To collaboratively identify the challenge that polarisation presents for UK policy and to support policy change that responds to divisions, continuity and convergence in the population's values. While we don't expect to see substantial impact of this nature until our series of Policy Labs conclude in the summer, as the UK lead for WVS we have been able to use the data to influence policy development around division and cohesion in the country. As outlined below, this has included a commission as part of Dame Sara Khan's Independent Review of Social Cohesion and Resilience, in which we drew in WVS and EVS trend data, alongside other sources, to provide a robust assessment of the evidence base on shared social values in England. Dame Sara Khan described the work as "an important aspect of my review in enabling me to understand what the evidence tells us but also where there are gaps", and said that it had directly informed "recommendations to Government on how we can build a more cohesive and resilient society". Across 2023-24, we have also delivered a series of briefings for the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, and the Equality and Human Rights Commission (for more details, see Engagement). Already, we see these efforts having an influence in informing strategy: "The World Values Survey is a unique resource for understanding UK public attitudes in a comparative perspective. The Policy Institute's accessible and thought-provoking analysis, and tailored engagement with practitioners complements the analysis in our Equality and Human Rights Monitor and has helped shape our approach to delivering our statutory duty, as Great Britain's Equality Regulator, to foster good relations in Great Britain." (John Kirkpatrick, Deputy CEO, Equality and Human Rights Commission) 3. To contribute to a more nuanced public understanding and debate around polarisation in Britain. While progress towards this objective is expected in 2024, following the release of outputs arising from the Policy Labs, our series of data reports have been explicitly identified by some in the media as an important "corrective" to a prevalent, yet in many ways incorrect view of the UK as a divided country. In discussing the role of the media in amplifying narratives of division in the UK at our project launch in June 2023, Guardian columnist Gaby Hinsliff commented: "For journalists like me, it's really important to have correctives like this data, to be forced sometimes to stop and think, well actually don't be swayed by what feels like 'the public mood' - a concept that doesn't really exist - drill down and listen to what the public is actually saying, which is not always the same thing as whoever is shouting loudest." (Gaby Hinsliff, Guardian columnist and writer - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdWsqVTl0XA)
First Year Of Impact 2023
Sector Communities and Social Services/Policy,Other
Impact Types Cultural

Societal

Policy & public services

 
Description Informed recommendations to Government on how we can build a more cohesive and resilient society
Geographic Reach National 
Policy Influence Type Contribution to a national consultation/review
 
Description Funding to conduct WVS boosts in Wales and Scotland
Amount £55,000 (GBP)
Organisation Barrow Cadbury Trust 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2020 
End 02/2024
 
Description Funding to conduct WVS boosts in Wales and Scotland
Amount £20,000 (GBP)
Organisation The British Academy 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2020 
End 02/2024
 
Description Funding to conduct WVS boosts in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland
Amount £128,000 (GBP)
Organisation Cabinet Office 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2020 
End 02/2024
 
Title World Values Survey Wave 7 (2017-2022) [Great Britain and Northern Ireland] 
Description Data for Great Britain and Northern Ireland, as integrated into the World Values Survey Wave 7 (2017-2022) dataset. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Too soon to report 
URL https://www.worldvaluessurvey.org/WVSDocumentationWV7.jsp
 
Description Expansion of Advisory Board 
Organisation Government of the UK
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution We have expanded our Advisory Board to strengthen connections into UK government, including: the Office for Civil Society in the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport (DCMS), the Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government (MHCLG), and the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO).
Collaborator Contribution Our Advisory Board provide expert input and direction from a range of disciplinary perspectives at key stages of the project, and will help to build connections among relevant policy networks.
Impact No outputs or outcomes to report yet.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Partnership with Barrow Cadbury Trust (as co-funder of study) 
Organisation Barrow Cadbury Trust
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution As a co-funder of the study, Barrow Cadbury Trust will be associated with the wider programme of work delivered through the ESRC grant, including a number of publications examining values change over time, generational trends and comparison with other countries. The Trust will also be invited to collaborate on public events and conferences, policy workshops and roundtable briefings funded by the ESRC grant, and to nominate a representative to serve on the project's Advisory Board. The research team will also provide bespoke analyses or briefings for the Trust as a contribution in kind to the partnership.
Collaborator Contribution The Trust's contribution would go towards funding the direct costs of additional fieldwork in Scotland and Wales, in order to ensure there is sufficient data to analyse these countries separately.
Impact No outputs or outcomes to report yet
Start Year 2020
 
Description Partnership with British Academy (as co-funder of study) 
Organisation The British Academy
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution As a co-funder of the study, the British Academy will be associated with the wider programme of work delivered through the ESRC grant, including a number of publications examining values change over time, generational trends and comparison with other countries. The British Academy will also be invited to collaborate on public events and conferences, policy workshops and roundtable briefings funded by the ESRC grant, and to nominate a representative to serve on the project's Advisory Board. The research team will also provide bespoke analyses or briefings for the British Academy, as well as a one-off training session, as a contribution in kind to the partnership.
Collaborator Contribution The Academy's contribution would go towards the direct costs of additional fieldwork in Scotland and Wales, in order to ensure that there is sufficient data to analyse these countries separately.
Impact No outputs or outcomes to report yet.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Partnership with Cabinet Office (as co-funder of study) 
Organisation Cabinet Office
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution As a co-funder of the study, the Cabinet Office will be associated with the wider programme of work delivered through the ESRC grant, including a number of publications examining values change over time, generational trends and comparison with other countries. The Cabinet Office will also be invited to collaborate on public events and conferences, policy workshops and roundtable briefings funded by the ESRC grant, and to nominate a representative to serve on the project's Advisory Board. The research team will also provide bespoke analyses or briefings for the Cabinet Office as a contribution in kind to the partnership.
Collaborator Contribution The Cabinet Office's contribution would go towards funding the direct costs of additional fieldwork in Scotland and Wales, in order to ensure there is sufficient data to analyse these countries separately.
Impact No outputs or outcomes to report yet.
Start Year 2020
 
Description A public polarised? Values, attitudes and beliefs in post-Brexit Britain 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact On 8 June 2023, we held an event in central London to highlight findings to date from the WVS programme, with a panel featuring Mark Easton, BBC News Home editor; Maria Sobolewska, Professor of Political Science at the University of Manchester and co-author of Brexitland; David Halpern, Chief Executive of the Behavioural Insights Team; Gaby Hinsliff, Guardian columnist and writer; and Bobby Duffy, Director of the Policy Institute at King's College London. Around 250 people attended in person, while another 180 registered to watch the livestream, with an audience consisting of members of the public, civil servants, journalists, academics and those from both the third and private sectors. In-person attendees were also provided with hard-copy reports of key findings and could enjoy animated data visualisations on screens displayed during the post-event reception.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdWsqVTl0XA
 
Description Academic conference 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact We are hosting a one-day academic conference on 11th April 2024, exploring issues of (de)polarisation in values, attitudes and beliefs in an international context. The event has attracted considerable interest from the academic community. A highlight of the event will be two keynote presentations from Prof. Christian Welzel and Prof. Pippa Norris, both esteemed colleagues in the field of political science and joint vice-chairs of the WVSA. The day also will feature parallel sessions that cover 34 papers from leading and early career researchers who are carrying out new work on polarisation, built around key themes such as identity politics, political partisanship and the role of religion and the media. Session chairs include Professor Helen Mason, Dr Roberto Foa, Professor David Voas, and Dr Vera Lomazzi, who will be joined by many more leading academics.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2024
URL https://www.uk-values.org/conference
 
Description Briefing into the Equality and Human Rights Commission 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact Briefing to the strategy team and Deputy CEO of the Equality and Human Rights Commission in November 2023 by Bobby Duffy.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
 
Description Briefings for the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact In November 2023, we presented an overview of WVS and our key findings as part of the Economic and Social Research (ESR) seminar series held by DLUHC. During the presentation we explored how the UK has become increasingly tolerant and trusting of others, how democracy continues to hold a high level of support, and how many are experiencing lower confidence in several key institutions.

In February 2024, we were invited to run another private briefing with DLUHC civil servants from the Union & Devolution Research & Analysis team. We presented an initial analysis using World Values Data to investigate (a) national identity across the UK, (b) feeling thermometers about Brexit, parties, and political institutions, (c) how social and political attitudes, and confidence in institutions vary across UK Nations. We will also present these findings at an upcoming DLUHC away day in March 2024.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023,2024
 
Description Broadcast interviews 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Media (as a channel to the public)
Results and Impact Bobby Duffy gave broadcast interviews on various findings from the releases to outlets including BBC News, GB News, Times Radio and LBC Radio, while David Halpern spoke to BBC Radio 4.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023,2024
 
Description Consultations with policy stakeholders 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact We are engaging in an ongoing process of consultation with policymakers and experts to inform the central question and design of our three Policy Labs. So far, these discussions have focused on international policy, including former Secretary of State for International Development Douglas Alexander, representatives from the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (which led to requests for briefings) and strategy for the Integrated Review (Prof. John Bew), and specialists from academia. We will continue this series in the run up to the second and third labs.

These consultations have not only helped to inform the design and framing of the Policy Labs, but have also given us anecdotal insights into how the data is already being used within government:

"It's incredibly valuable to have as a resource within government. Quite literally, just yesterday I was sharing your work - the World Values Survey work - among colleagues looking for a greater depth of understanding of broad social patterns within the UK and how they're changing over time, and how the UK might compare to other countries." (DLUHC consultation)
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023,2024
 
Description Emerging findings workshop with policy makers in Northern Ireland 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact Analysts Dr Paul Stoneman and James Wright visited Belfast in November to discuss preliminary findings with the Social Change Initiative and their close networks of policy makers and practitioners. In a two day workshop, they ran through the background and the structure of the data, as well as key initial findings from the data. This included themes around ethical values and moral norms (including moral foundations theory), national identity and independence from the UK, and political attitudes and cultures. The event was designed to secure early engagement with a key stakeholder group, in order to understand the sensitivity of interpreting findings in the different socio-political contexts of the UK nations and to tailor analysis and engagement activities to deliver actionable insights for this group.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Media engagement 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Media (as a channel to the public)
Results and Impact Through press releases and engagement with key journalists, publication of the nine reports generated over a thousand pieces of national, international and regional media coverage. The findings were reported on by virtually all major outlets, including the BBC, Guardian, Times, Telegraph, Mail, Express, Metro, Financial Times, Independent, Sky News, New Statesman, Economist, Evening Standard, HuffPost, Mirror, CNBC, the i, Observer, as well as more specialist titles such as Pink News, Church Times, Civil Service World, Management Today and others.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023,2024
 
Description Policy Labs 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact In this project, we are hosting three one-day Policy Labs. We have made significant progress on the first, which will take place on 19 March 2024, and focus on how to use World Values Survey data to inform decision-making for international policies. Participants will journalists from the BBC (Mark Easton, Emily Kasriel), representatives from the Home Office (Hannah Scarr), DLUHC (Joel Salmon, Simon Cereda), the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (Joe Allsop), the Department for Science Innovation and Technology (Joseph Clease), and researchers and practitioners from King's College London, Barrow Cadbury Trust, Nuffield, and the British Foreign Policy Group. Through the day, participants will actively engage with the WVS data and discuss how these can be used to inform policy relevant to migration, trade, and international security.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2024
 
Description Press releasing media packs of key findings 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Media (as a channel to the public)
Results and Impact Press-releases for all nine media packs were sent to all major news outlets, drawing on a large and established database managed by the Policy Institute.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023,2024
 
Description Project website 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact In November 2022, we launched a project website as an additional deliverable to what was promised in the proposal. In addition to providing links to events, reports, blogs and data, the website hosts interactive versions of charts linked to themes covered in the data reports, to enable exploration of trends in a more intuitive and user-friendly way.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.uk-values.org/
 
Description Trust in trouble: how can we do democracy differently? 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact On 4 July 2023, we held an event in partnership with NatCen, at which we explored the potential of deliberative research methods, drawing on and presenting findings from the WVS programme on the public's confidence in political institutions and attitudes to democracy. The panel featured Douglas Alexander, former Minister of State and Secretary of State; Ceri Davies, Director of the Centre for Deliberative Research, NatCen; Suzanne Hall, Director of Engagement, the Policy Institute at King's College London; Miriam Levin, Chief Executive of Engage Britain; and Jane Suiter, Director of Dublin City University's Institute for Future Media, Democracy, and Society. 110 people - including members of the public, civil servants, journalists, academics and those from both the third and private sectors - attended in person, with another 150 registering to watch the livestream.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SaIMqfjahfA