This article documents public opinion research activities in Mexico in the 1940s and the role played by Hungarian professor László Radványi, who immigrated to that country at the height of World War II. Our research relies on several of Radványi's publications archived in different countries, as well as on interviews with family, acquaintances, and experts on the work of his wife, the German poet Anna Seghers. During his years in Mexico, Radványi founded the Scientific Institute of Mexican Public Opinion, in 1941, and the International Journal of Opinion and Attitude Research, in 1947—a forefather of today's IJPOR. He was also a founding member of WAPOR. His early '' sample surveys'' raised important methodological issues and recorded opinion results that reflect the vibrant times of war and policy making in a modernizing country. However, Radványi's contribution to the profession has been virtually forgotten. Until now, accounts about how public opinion research began in Mexico either ignored Radványi's works or reduced his ten years of survey research to a single footnote. This article is an attempt to fill this enormous omission and highlight some of Radványi's contributions to these early stages of survey research.
%0 Journal Article
%1 moreno_lost_2009
%A Moreno, Alejandro
%A Sánchez-Castro, Manuel
%D 2009
%J International Journal of Public Opinion Research
%K 1940s externalist hungary institutional journal methodology mexico professional-association public-opinion-research radvanyi wapor
%N 1
%P 3--24
%R 10.1093/ijpor/edp002
%T A Lost Decade? László Radványi and the Origins of Public Opinion Research in Mexico, 1941–1952
%V 21
%X This article documents public opinion research activities in Mexico in the 1940s and the role played by Hungarian professor László Radványi, who immigrated to that country at the height of World War II. Our research relies on several of Radványi's publications archived in different countries, as well as on interviews with family, acquaintances, and experts on the work of his wife, the German poet Anna Seghers. During his years in Mexico, Radványi founded the Scientific Institute of Mexican Public Opinion, in 1941, and the International Journal of Opinion and Attitude Research, in 1947—a forefather of today's IJPOR. He was also a founding member of WAPOR. His early '' sample surveys'' raised important methodological issues and recorded opinion results that reflect the vibrant times of war and policy making in a modernizing country. However, Radványi's contribution to the profession has been virtually forgotten. Until now, accounts about how public opinion research began in Mexico either ignored Radványi's works or reduced his ten years of survey research to a single footnote. This article is an attempt to fill this enormous omission and highlight some of Radványi's contributions to these early stages of survey research.
@article{moreno_lost_2009,
abstract = {This article documents public opinion research activities in Mexico in the 1940s and the role played by Hungarian professor L{\'a}szl{\'o} Radv{\'a}nyi, who immigrated to that country at the height of World War II. Our research relies on several of Radv{\'a}nyi's publications archived in different countries, as well as on interviews with family, acquaintances, and experts on the work of his wife, the German poet Anna Seghers. During his years in Mexico, Radv{\'a}nyi founded the Scientific Institute of Mexican Public Opinion, in 1941, and the International Journal of Opinion and Attitude Research, in 1947\textemdash{}a forefather of today's IJPOR. He was also a founding member of WAPOR. His early '' sample surveys'' raised important methodological issues and recorded opinion results that reflect the vibrant times of war and policy making in a modernizing country. However, Radv{\'a}nyi's contribution to the profession has been virtually forgotten. Until now, accounts about how public opinion research began in Mexico either ignored Radv{\'a}nyi's works or reduced his ten years of survey research to a single footnote. This article is an attempt to fill this enormous omission and highlight some of Radv{\'a}nyi's contributions to these early stages of survey research.},
added-at = {2019-08-29T01:56:31.000+0200},
author = {Moreno, Alejandro and {S{\'a}nchez-Castro}, Manuel},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/291f7411fb327a31f55c2a3d58b95ff59/jpooley},
doi = {10.1093/ijpor/edp002},
interhash = {7c31b769ff5f0b0ce9e31bd2a7fc557c},
intrahash = {91f7411fb327a31f55c2a3d58b95ff59},
issn = {1471-6909},
journal = {International Journal of Public Opinion Research},
keywords = {1940s externalist hungary institutional journal methodology mexico professional-association public-opinion-research radvanyi wapor},
number = 1,
pages = {3--24},
timestamp = {2019-08-29T01:56:31.000+0200},
title = {A {{Lost Decade}}? {{L{\'a}szl{\'o} Radv{\'a}nyi}} and the {{Origins}} of {{Public Opinion Research}} in {{Mexico}}, 1941\textendash{}1952},
volume = 21,
year = 2009
}