I'm going through my newest data set (~3300 answers) and it's absolutely fascinating. I asked about 'who do you know', with stronger weights for knowing someone better. Some finds so far:
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Women on average are more likely to report knowing someone who X The most masculine gendered answer is that men are more likely to report knowing someone in jail.
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Eastern Europe is living up to the reputation of conservative - they're least likely to report knowing people who are trans/poly/sex workers, but also least likely to report knowing ppl who've been raped (shame culture?) They're most likely to know a pedo.
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Suburban/rural America is very consistent - likely to know trump voters, racists, and fundie Christians. Also most likely to know someone diagnosed with lung cancer! Urban America: Most likely to know homeless and in jail... also poly and trans ppl.
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Overall, suburban/rural and urban America weren't that different from each other when compared to other regions of the world. Canadians and ppl in western europe are most likely to know Muslims.
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The least prevalent thing by far, less common than knowing someone who won over 10k in the lottery or who didn't learn to read as a child, was victims of sex trafficking. Of those who did report knowing this, the majority are in eastern Europe.
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basically sex trafficking is extremely, extremely rare. I don't think this is suppression due to shame - there was a -0.45 correlation between reported knowledge of rape and knowledge of sex trafficking (tho region n=11 so...)
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Replying to @Aella_Girl
Either that or its victims are invisible. Hard to get a sense of how many people are invisible, and they are the obvious targets.
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It seems unlikely that this would explain the extent to which this wasn't reported on my survey.
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