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American Soldier Studies of WWII

On the day after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the Research Branch of the Information and Education Division of the War Department conducted the first in a series of large-scale surveys of personnel in the United States armed forces. In the words of project staff director Samuel A. Stouffer, the purpose of the project was “to provide the army command quickly and accurately with facts about the attitudes of soldiers which…might be helpful in policy formation.”

By the end of World War II, more than half a million soldiers had been interviewed on such subjects as:

  • their feelings toward the army
  • their living conditions and entertainment
  • their attitudes toward the enemy and the war
  • their mental health
  • their actual combat experiences
  • and many others.

The data gathered in the course of this massive project today represent a trove of research material whose historical, sociological, and methodological value extends well beyond the original intent of the investigators. These data are now available in their entirety from the Roper Center in the form of over 100 studies with complete documentation.

Click here to go directly to the American Soldier Studies

For further information on this study please contact Data Services at Data Services.

Date Published: January 16, 2015