In December 2008, the Afrobarometer surveyed a nationally representative, random, stratified probability sample of 1,200 Mozambicans. Face-to-face interviews were conducted by the Afrobarometer team based at Centre for Policy Analysis (CAP) of the Eduardo Mondlane University (UEM). The sample was drawn by taking the smallest geographic units, Census Enumeration Areas (EA’s), and stratifying all EA’s across the country into separate lists according to province and urban or rural status. 150 EA’s were then randomly selected from these lists with the probability proportionate to its size in the overall population as represented in the 2007 census conducted by the National Institute of Statistics (INE). This ensures that every eligible adult had an equal and known chance of being selected. Eight households were then randomly selected within each EA, and a respondent 18 years of age or older was randomly selected from each household. A gender quota ensured that every other interview must be with a female. A sample of this size is sufficient to yield an overall margin of error of +/- 3 percent at a confidence level of 95 percent.
Summary of results
Mozambique Round 4 summary of results
Summary of results for the Afrobarometer Round 4 survey in Mozambique in 2008
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