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Is Marriage Becoming Irrelevant?

Twenty-nine percent of U.S. adults say it is very important for a couple who has a child together to be married, down from 38% in 2013 and 49% in 2006.

Gallup Decade in Review: 2010-2019

Gallup findings over the past decade reveal that the years from 2010 to 2019 encompassed some revolutionary changes in public opinion.

U.S. Support for Gay Marriage Edges to New High

Sixty-four percent of Americans say same-sex marriages should be recognized as legally valid. Although not meaningfully different from the 61% last year, it is the highest percentage in Gallup's trend dating back to 1996.

Estimating the Risk of Modern Slavery in 2018

Gallup and Walk Free developed a methodology to estimate the prevalence of modern slavery using an innovative modeling approach.

Supreme Court Approval Holds at Record Low

Forty percent of Americans approve of the job the U.S. Supreme Court is doing, unchanged from the record low measured last fall.

World Split on Treatment of Gay and Lesbian People

Gallup trends show that the world remains divided over whether local communities are good places for gay and lesbian people to live in.

A Look at Southern Baptists in the U.S. Today

Southern Baptists, meeting in Nashville for their annual convention, remain the largest Protestant denomination in the U.S.

Most Student Loan Borrowers Have Delayed Major Life Events

A majority of student loan borrowers who have not completed their degree say they have delayed at least one major life event due to their loan debt.

Is the World Better for Gay People Than It Was 10 Years Ago?

Half of the world's adults (50%) now say their city or area is a "good place" for gay and lesbian people to live -- a figure that has doubled over the past decade and represents a new high in Gallup World Poll's trend dating back to 2005.

Gallup Vault: Americans Slow to Back Interracial Marriage

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 50 years ago that state laws against interracial marriage were unconstitutional. But as that case was wending its way through the courts, less than half of Americans agreed.
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