Remove post-election-survey-millennials-and-the-2016-presidential-election
article thumbnail

Report: Millennials Rank Education, Healthcare and Employment as Top Election Issues

Achieve

New research from Achieve investigates millennials’ ongoing cause engagement behaviors during a presidential election year. Today Achieve, in partnership with the Case Foundation, released the second wave of research from the 2016 Millennial Impact Report.

Issue 52
article thumbnail

Social Media, Causes, Politics & Millennials: How Online Cause Engagement Changes in an Election Year

Connection Cafe

This study also examines millennials’ interest and activation in specific causes that may be differentiated by their support of a particular political party. We know through years of research within The Millennial Impact Project that millennials value cause work (any activities that are philanthropic in nature) and are engaged with causes.

professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Post-Election Survey: Millennials and The 2016 Presidential Election

Achieve

The 2016 Presidential election was arguably the most talked about election ever. in December 2015, one entire year before the election actually took place. It is no wonder that so many analysts were fascinated with the role millennials, the largest living generation in the U.S. number one topic.

Survey 52
article thumbnail

Millennial Voices: Advocates and Activists Over Donors and Volunteers

Connection Cafe

Millennials are dissatisfied with and uncertain about America’s future , says the most recent research released by Achieve in the Millennial Impact Report, The Power of Voice: A New Era of Cause Activation and Social Issue Adoption. They also voted in the 2016 presidential election in far greater numbers than was expected.

Voice 44
article thumbnail

How did the Presidential Election Affect Millennial Voters?

Achieve

Wave 3 of the 2016 Millennial Impact Report examines millennials’ self-identified attitudes and voting intentions, especially during the last three months before Election Day, which may help researchers and reporters across the country explain why so many of us were caught off guard at the results of the nationwide vote.