The Allensbach Institute, formally the Allensbach Institute for Public Opinion Research or Allensbach Institute for Public Opinion Polling (German: Institut für Demoskopie Allensbach), is a private polling institute based in Allensbach, Baden-Württemberg, Germany.
In 1988, political economistRenate Köcher, a former advisor to ChancellorHelmut Kohl, became managing director of the institute alongside Noelle-Neumann,[3] who was also the sole shareholder in the company. Noelle-Neumann transferred ownership of the institute to the Allensbach Foundation for Public Opinion Research (German: Stiftung Demoskopie Allensbach) in May 1996.[2]
The institute is known for its annual New Year survey of the "state of the German soul" as commentator David Marsh, citing some 2012 and comparative results, termed it.[13]
The institute employs roughly one hundred full-time employees, including about 25 scientists, and two thousand avocational interviewers, and conducts approximately one hundred surveys and 80,000 interviews yearly. Although the institute conducts surveys primarily of German public opinion, it has participated in or carried out multiple "international opinion research projects".[2]
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Pfister, Gertrud (2002). "Sport for women". In Roland Naul; Ken Hardman (eds.). Sport and Physical Education in Germany. International Society for Comparative Physical Education and Sport Series. Routledge. pp. 165–90. ISBN978-0-419-25390-7. Retrieved 2008-02-06.
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Barnstone, Deborah Ascher (2005). The Transparent State: Architecture and politics in postwar Germany. Routledge. p. 212. ISBN978-0-415-70019-1. Retrieved 2008-02-06. For each study, the institute questions thousands of Germans on every subject imaginable from history to politics to women's issues to immigration policy. It is, therefore, an excellent source for information on the general populace.
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Marsh, David (2012-02-13). "Why does Germany feel so good about itself?". MarketWatch. Retrieved 2012-02-13. Despite all the uncertainties about the debt crisis [in early 2012], 49% of the populace were hopeful about the next 12 months, only 17% said they were worried, although 26% said they were "skeptical." The proportion in the optimism category was a bit lower than 56% the previous year, but this is still a relatively high figure. Since German was reunified in 1990, there have been only eight years when a majority said they were hopeful. And only three years since the turn of the century (2000, 2007 and 2010).