British Social Online

British Social is a review of British public's changing attitudes towards social, economic, political and moral issues. British Social Attitudes is the leading social research survey in Britain. According to this survey - The British public is more satisfied with the National Health Service than at any time since 1984. The seventy nine percent of people feel we are treated respectfully in public in our day to day lives. Seventy percent people feel they have at least three people that they can talk to when they are feeling this way.

British Social Anthropology is the that studies how currently living human beings behave in social groups. The is the study of social organization of a particular people like childrearing and socialization, customs, economic and political organization, kinship and family structure, law and conflict resolution, gender relations, patterns of consumption and exchange, religion etc..

The British Association of Social Workers is the largest professional association of social workers in the United Kingdom. It has created a code of ethics that outlines good social work practice and works to support social workers through education and resources.

The British Social Attitudes (BSA) survey series began in 1983 and has been conducted every year.One of the main purposes of the BSA is to allow the monitoring of patterns of continuity and change and the examination of the relative rates at which attitudes with respect to social issues change over time. The subjects covered by the surveys are wide-ranging but include housing and home ownership, work and unemployment, health and social care, education, business and industry, social security and dependency, tax and spending, the welfare state, transport, environment and the countryside, constitutional reform, law and order, civil liberties, moral issues and sexual mores, racism and sexism, social inequality, religion, politics and governance.