2023

This report explores  public perception of foreign threats in Georgia.
This report examines partisanship and polarization in Georgia at a societal level.
A CRRC Georgia survey found that people living in Tbilisi were more willing to accept democracy-eroding policies if they believed that their preferred party was in power.
Applications are now being accepted for our 9th annual conference entitled- New Frontiers: The South Caucasus Amidst New Challenges. This year conference will be dedicated to Russian-Ukrainian war which has altered the geopolitical, economic, and demographic state of the South…
A recent survey has found that a slight majority of Georgians are afraid of being victims of crimes, with women, those living in the capital, and supporters of the country’s main opposition party particularly likely to feel concerned.…
Caucasus Research Resource Center (CRRC-Georgia) presented results of a new survey that scrutinized perception of foreign threats in Georgia on 21 February.
CRRC-Georgia data found that individual political polarisation — how committedly partisan a person is — is relatively low in Georgia, despite concerns about the country’s polarisation as a whole.
Caucasus Research Resource Center (CRRC-Georgia) presented a research report examining partisanship in Georgia and the level of affective polarization in the society on 9 February.