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15 December 2011 – At the end of a year that has seen multiple revolutions in the Middle East, a new BBC global poll across 22 countries shows that a narrow majority thinks the Arab Spring protests were a good thing.
The poll, conducted by GlobeScan among 21,558 people, reveals that 55% on average see the protests as “mostly positive,” with just over a quarter (28%) feeling they were “mostly negative”, and the rest undecided.
The European nations polled are most likely to be upbeat about the Arab Spring. More than three-quarters of Germans (78%) and French (76%) say they see the protests as mostly positive—the highest proportions in the survey. Egyptians themselves are also mostly positive (72%)—though more than one in four disagrees (26%).
The poll was conducted before the fall of the Gaddafi regime in Libya and recent renewed unrest in Egypt and Syria.
Two of the three other African nations in the sample—Nigeria and Kenya—also have large majorities (67% and 65% respectively) who feel that the Arab Spring protests were mostly positive. Apart from those countries, however, the developing-world and middle-income countries polled are more ambivalent about the protests.
Russia is the only country where the balance of opinion is that the protests were mostly negative (31% positive, 43% negative). But there is significant ambivalence as well in Pakistan (40% positive, 35% negative) and in India (41% positive, 30% negative). In contrast, the clear balance of opinion in China is that the protests were a good thing (50% positive, 27% negative.)
GlobeScan Chairman Doug Miller says: “Support for the Arab Spring is widespread, but cautious. The findings suggest that outside of the stable democracies of Europe and North America, concerns about the potential of post-revolution instability may be moderating positive views—particularly in Russia, Pakistan, and India, three countries particularly sensitive to the threat of internal unrest.”
In total 21,558 citizens across 22 countries were interviewed face-to-face or by telephone between July 3, 2011 and September 16, 2011. Polling was conducted for BBC World Service by the international polling firm GlobeScan and its research partners in each country. In eight of the 22 countries, the sample was limited to major urban areas. The margin of error per country ranges from +/- 2.0 to 4.4 per cent, 19 times out of 20.
For more details, please visit www.GlobeScan.com
Participating Countries
In Brazil, China, Ecuador, Egypt, Indonesia, Panama, the Philippines, and Turkey urban samples were used.
For detailed results, including country-by-country data for all key questions, please see the Key Findings page below.
Media Contacts
For media interviews with the participating pollsters, please contact:
Sam Mountford, Research Director GlobeScan Incorporated, London +44 20 7928 5368 (Mobile: +44 7854 132625) sam.mountford@globescan.com |
Oliver Martin, Director, Global Development GlobeScan Incorporated, Toronto +1 416 969 3073 (Mobile: +1 416 721 3544) oliver.martin@globescan.com |
About GlobeScan
GlobeScan Incorporated is an international opinion research consultancy. We provide global organisations with evidence-based insight to help them set strategy and shape their communications. Companies, multilateral institutions, governments, and NGOs trust GlobeScan for our unique expertise across reputation management, sustainability, and stakeholder relations. GlobeScan conducts research in over 90 countries, is ISO 9001-2008 quality certified and a signatory to the UN Global Compact.
Established in 1987, GlobeScan is an independent, management-owned company with offices in Toronto, London, and San Francisco. For more information, visit: www.globescan.com
About BBC World Service
The BBC World Service is an international multimedia broadcaster, delivering a wide range of language and regional services on radio, TV, online and via wireless handheld devices. It uses multiple platforms to reach its weekly audience of 166 million globally, including shortwave, AM, FM, digital satellite and cable channels. Its news sites include audio and video content and offer opportunities to join the global debate. BBC World Service offers its multilingual radio content to partner FM stations around the world and has numerous partnerships supplying content to news websites, mobile phones and other wireless handheld devices as well as TV channels. For more information, visit: www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice
Backgrounder: Region-by-Region Results
North America
Americans are quite upbeat about the popular upheavals across the Middle East this year. Sixty-four per cent think these events are mostly positive, nine points above the global average of 55 per cent.
Latin America
In Latin America, perceptions of the popular uprisings are positive overall. In each of the six countries surveyed in the region, there is either a large plurality or a majority of respondents who think the upheavals are mostly positive.
Panama is the country where the highest proportion welcomes the protests (59%), followed by Brazil (54%), and Chile (51%). But the most positive balance of support in Latin America is in Chile (+39%), with only 12 per cent saying they consider the protests to be mostly negative. Opinions in Mexico and in Peru are more muted, with pluralities of 49 and 40 per cent respectively who say that the popular movements in the Arab world are mostly positive.
Forty-seven per cent of Ecuadorians are of the same opinion, but with 42 per cent who think the protests are mostly negative (second highest proportion in the survey), they have the least favourable balance of support in Latin America, just narrowly positive (+5)—the second lowest balance figure seen in the survey, along with Pakistan.
Europe
In Europe, all surveyed countries except Russia are strong supporters of the Arab Spring protests. Support is particularly high among the EU nations. The Germans and the French are the most favourable, with 78 and 76 per cent respectively who think that these events are mostly positive—the highest and second highest proportions in the survey—well above the 22-country global average of 55 per cent.
Public opinion in Spain and in the UK is also very supportive of the events in the Middle East. Seventy per cent of Spaniards, and two-thirds of British (67%), perceive the protests as being mostly positive.
Support in Turkey is not as strong, but there is still a majority of 55 per cent of Turks who say that the popular uprisings are mostly positive—an identical proportion to the global average.
Russia is the only country where public opinion is not favourable to the protests. Only 31 per cent of Russians view them as being mostly positive (lowest percentage in the survey), while a plurality of 43 per cent perceives them as mostly negative (highest percentage in the survey). As a result, the balance of support in Russia is negative (-12), unique among the countries surveyed.
Africa
In Africa, there is a widespread support for the Arab Spring protests in three out of the four countries surveyed. Egyptians are the most favourable, with 72 per cent who think that the popular uprisings are mostly positive—the third highest percentage in the survey after Germany and France.
Public opinion in Nigeria and Kenya is also very supportive, with 67 and 65 per cent respectively who view the protests as being mostly positive, significantly above the 55 per cent global average.
Ghana contrasts with the other African countries surveyed in offering much more muted support for the protests. A plurality of 48 per cent of Ghanaians perceives the popular movements to be mostly positive, while 37 per cent see them as mostly negative, making the balance of support positive by only 11 points.
Asia
In Asia, support for the Arab Spring is less vocal than in the other regions. The Philippines and China are the Asian countries with the highest proportions who perceive the protests to be mostly positive (51% and 50%, respectively). However, Filipinos’ support is quite muted, as 41 per cent of the population view the protests as mostly negative (the third highest percentage in the survey). Just 27 per cent of Chinese respondents have negative views, which makes the Chinese the most favourable Asian country toward the Arab Spring events, with their balance of support at +23 points.
In Indonesia, a plurality of 46 per cent thinks that the popular upheavals are mostly favourable, while a third of the population (33%) leans the other way.
Indians’ and Pakistanis’ support for the protests in the Middle East is among the lowest in the survey. In these two countries, just four in ten respondents view the protests as being mostly positive (41% in India, 40% in Pakistan). The balance of support in India is positive by only 11 points, and is narrowly positive in Pakistan (+5).
Methodology
In total 21,558 citizens in Brazil, Chile, China, Ecuador, Egypt, France, Germany, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Panama, Peru, the Philippines, Russia, Spain, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States were interviewed face-to-face or by telephone between July 3, 2011 and September 16, 2011. Polling was conducted for BBC World Service by GlobeScan and its research partners in each country.
In Brazil, China, Ecuador, Egypt, Indonesia, Panama, the Philippines, and Turkey urban samples were used. The margin of error per country ranges from +/- 2.0 to 4.4 per cent, 19 times out of 20.
Country | Sample Size (unweighted) | Field dates | Sample frame | Survey methodology | Type of sample |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Brazil | 806 | July 26 – August 15, 2011 | 18–69 | Telephone | Urban1 |
Chile | 1200 | August 18–29, 2011 | 18+ | Face-to-face | National |
China | 1000 | July 13–31, 2011 | 18+ | Telephone | Urban2 |
Ecuador | 497 | August 27 – September 16, 2011 | 18+ | Face-to-face | Urban3 |
Egypt | 1005 | July 16–29, 2011 | 18+ | Face-to-face | Urban4 |
France | 503 | August 16–18, 2011 | 15+ | Telephone | National |
Germany | 1013 | July 8–27, 2011 | 16–70 | Telephone | National |
Ghana | 1037 | July 25 – August 20, 2011 | 18+ | Face-to-face | National |
India | 1254 | July 15–29, 2011 | 18+ | Face-to-face | National |
Indonesia | 1000 | July 3 – August 25, 2011 | 18+ | Face-to-face | Urban5 |
Kenya | 816 | August 5 – September 1, 2011 | 18+ | Face-to-face | National |
Mexico | 1000 | July 23–28, 2011 | 18+ | Face-to-face | National |
Nigeria | 755 | August 2–9, 2011 | 18–65 | Face-to-face | National |
Pakistan | 2400 | July 18 – August 8, 2011 | 18+ | Face-to-face | National |
Panama | 750 | August 9–22, 2011 | 18+ | Telephone | Urban6 |
Peru | 1215 | July 15–20, 2011 | 18–70 | Face-to-face | National |
Philippines | 800 | July 23 – August 8, 2011 | 18+ | Face-to-face | Urban7 |
Russia | 1006 | July 22 – August 10, 2011 | 18+ | Face-to-face | National |
Spain | 501 | September 1–10, 2011 | 18+ | Telephone | National |
Turkey | 1000 | July 5–18, 2011 | 15+ | Face-to-face | Urban8 |
United Kingdom | 1000 | July 6 – August 23, 2011 | 18+ | Telephone | National |
USA | 1000 | July 8 – August 18, 2011 | 18+ | Telephone | National |
- In Brazil the survey was conducted in Belo Horizonte, Brasilia, Curitiba, Goiânia, Porto Alegre, Recife, Rio de Janeiro, Salvador, and São Paulo, representing 18 per cent of the national population.
- In China the survey was conducted in Beijing, Beiliu, Chengdu, Dujiangyan, Fenyang, Fuyang, Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Manzhouli, Quanzhou, Qujing, Shanghai, Shenyang, Shuangcheng, Wuhan, Xi’an, Xining, and Zhengzhou, representing 45 per cent of the national adult population.
- In Ecuador the survey was conducted in Cuenca, Guayaquil and Quito, representing 52 per cent of the urban population.
- In Egypt the survey was conducted in Alexandria, Cairo, Giza, and Shubra El-Kheima, representing 24 per cent of the national population.
- In Indonesia the survey was conducted in Bandung, Jakarta, Makassar, Medan, and Surabaya, representing 27 per cent of the national adult population.
- In Panama the survey was conducted in Panamá, Chiriquí, Colón, Coclé, Veraguas, Herrera, Bocas del Toro and Los Santos, representing 70 per cent of the adult population.
- In the Philippines the survey was conducted in the National Capital Region, representing 27 per cent of the urban adult population.
- In Turkey the survey was conducted in Adana, Ankara, Antalya, Bursa, Diyarbakir, Erzurum, Istanbul, Izmir, Konya, Samsun, and Zonguldak, representing 56 per cent of the national adult population.
Research Partners
Country | Research Institute | Location | Contact |
---|---|---|---|
Brazil | Market Analysis | Florianópolis | Fabián Echegarayfabian@marketanalysis.com.br +55 48 3364 0000 |
Chile | Mori Chile | Santiago | Marta Lagos mlagos@morichile.cl +56 2334 4544 |
China | GlobeScan | Toronto | Oliver Martin oliver.martin@globescan.com +1 416 969 3073 |
Ecuador | Propraxis / Sigma Dos | Quito | Carlos Moreno cmoreno@propraxismarketing.com +593 7 2888519 |
Egypt | Attitude Market Research | Cairo | Mohamed Al Gendy ‘; document.write(‘<a ‘=”” +=”” path=”” ‘\”=”” prefix=”” ‘:’=”” addy2487=”” ‘\’=””>’); document.write(addy_text2487); document.write(‘<\/a>’); //–>\n +202 22711262 |
France | Efficience 3 | Paris and Rheims | Christian de Thieulloy christian.t@efficience3.com +33 1 4316 5442 |
Germany | Ri*QUESTA GmbH | Teningen | Bernhard Rieder riquesta.rieder@t-online.de +49 7641 93 43 36 |
Ghana | Business Interactive Consulting Limited | Accra | Razaaque Animashaun info@bigghana.com +233 302 783140 / +233 302 782892 |
India | Team C Voter | Noida | Yashwant Deshmukh yashwant@teamcvoter.com +91 120 4175200 (ext. 223) |
Indonesia | DEKA Marketing Research | Jakarta | Irma Malibari irma.malibari@deka-research.co.id info@deka-research.co.id +62 21 723 6901 |
Kenya | Research Path Associates Ltd. | Nairobi | Jeremy Mwololo jeremy.mwololo@rpa.co.ke +254 020 2734770 |
Mexico | Parametria | Mexico City | Francisco Abundis fabundis@parametria.com.mx +52 55 2614 0089 |
Nigeria | Millward Brown | Lagos | Michael Umogun michael.umogun@millwardbrown.com +234 802 311 7969 |
Pakistan | Gallup Pakistan | Islamabad | Ijaz Shafi Gilani isb@gallup.com.pk +92 51 2655630 |
Panama | Dichter & Neira | Panama City | Gabriel Neira gneira@dichter-neira.com + 507 236 4000 |
Peru | Datum | Lima | Urpi Torrado ‘; document.write(‘<a ‘=”” +=”” path=”” ‘\”=”” prefix=”” ‘:’=”” addy19452=”” ‘\’=””>’); document.write(addy_text19452); document.write(‘<\/a>’); //–>\n +511 215 0600 |
Philippines | M&S-Sigma Dos Philippines, Inc. | Makati City | Teodora Marasigan tmmarasigan@ms-sigmados.com +63 2 8172780 |
Russia | CESSI Institute for Comparative Social Research | Moscow | Vladimir Andreenkov vladimir.andreenkov@cessi.ru +7 495 650 55 18 |
Spain | Sigma Dos Int. | Madrid | Gines Garrido ‘; document.write(‘<a ‘=”” +=”” path=”” ‘\”=”” prefix=”” ‘:’=”” addy173=”” ‘\’=””>’); document.write(addy_text173); document.write(‘<\/a>’); //–>\n +34 91 360 0474 |
Turkey | Yöntem Research Consultancy Ltd. | Istanbul | Bülent Gündoğmuş info@yontemresearch.com mehmet.aktulga@yontemresearch.com melike.kiratli@yontemresearch.com +90 212 278 1219 |
United Kingdom | Populus Data Solutions | London | Patrick Diamond pdiamond@populusdatasolutions.com +44 207 553 4148 |
USA | Populus Data Solutions | London | Patrick Diamond pdiamond@populusdatasolutions.com +44 207 553 4148 |
Question Wording
Do you see these protests as mostly positive, or mostly negative?
- 01 Mostly positive
- 02 Mostly negative
- VOLUNTEERED (DO NOT READ OUT)
- 99 Don’t Know / Not applicable