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E-grāmata: Hard-to-Survey Populations

Edited by (University of Illinois, Chicago), Edited by , Edited by , Edited by , Edited by (University of Chicago)
  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Aug-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781139990035
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Aug-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781139990035

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Surveys are used extensively in psychology, sociology and business, as well as many other areas, but they are becoming increasingly difficult to conduct. Some segments of the population are hard to sample, some are hard to find, others are hard to persuade to participate in surveys, and still others are hard to interview. This book offers the first systematic look at the populations and settings that make surveys hard to conduct and at the methods researchers use to meet these challenges. It covers a wide range of populations (immigrants, persons with intellectual difficulties, and political extremists) and settings (war zones, homeless shelters) that offer special problems or present unusual challenges for surveys. The team of international contributors also addresses sampling strategies including methods such as respondent-driven sampling and examines data collection strategies including advertising and other methods for engaging otherwise difficult populations.

Recenzijas

'The challenge of doing research with rare and difficult to find populations is shared across all sectors of the research industry. This book offers the first comprehensive treatment of methods specifically designed to meet that challenge.' Reg Baker, Senior Consultant, Market Strategies International 'Hard- to-Survey Populations fills a key gap in the survey methods literature. It will be relied upon by both novices and experts.' Stanley Presser, Distinguished University Professor, University of Maryland

Papildus informācija

Examines the different populations and settings that can make surveys hard to conduct and discusses methods to meet these challenges.
List of figures
xi
List of tables
xiii
List of boxes
xv
List of contributors
xvii
Preface xxiii
PART I INTRODUCTION
1(108)
1 Defining hard-to-survey populations
3(18)
Roger Tourangeau
2 Hard-to-survey populations in comparative perspective
21(16)
Tom W. Smith
3 Measuring undercounts for hard-to-survey groups
37(21)
Mary H. Mulry
4 Counting and estimating hard-to-survey populations in the 2011 Census
58(24)
Owen Abbott
Garnett Compton
5 A review of quality issues associated with studying hard-to-survey populations
82(27)
Lars Lyberg
Mathew Stange
Janet Harkness
Peter Mohler
Beth-Ellen Pennell
Lilli Japec
PART II CONDUCTING SURVEYS IN DIFFICULT SETTINGS
109(114)
6 Disaster research: surveying displaced populations
111(23)
Beth-Ellen Pennell
Yashwant Deshmukh
Jennifer Kelley
Patty Maher
James Wagner
Dan Tomlin
7 Conducting surveys in areas of armed conflict
134(23)
Zeina N. Mneimneh
William G. Axinn
Dirgha Ghimire
Kristen L. Cibelli
Mohammad Salih Alkaisy
8 Interviewing in disaster-affected areas: lessons learned from post-Katrina surveys of New Orleans residents
157(23)
Mollyann Brodie
Claudia Deane
Elizabeth C. Hamel
Melissa Herrmann
Eran Ben-Porath
9 Reaching and enumerating homeless populations
180(21)
Irene Glasser
Eric Hirsch
Anna Chan
10 "Where are our costumes?": the All Ireland Traveller Health Study -- our Geels 2007--2011
201(22)
Cecily C. Kelleher
Brigid Quirke
PART III CONDUCTING SURVEYS WITH SPECIAL POPULATIONS
223(176)
11 Representing the populations: what general social surveys can learn from surveys among specific groups
225(20)
Ineke Stoop
12 Surveying cultural and linguistic minorities
245(25)
Janet Harkness
Mathew Stange
Kristen L. Cibelli
Peter Mohler
Beth-Ellen Pennell
13 Challenges to surveying immigrants
270(23)
Douglas S. Massey
14 Ethnographic evaluations on coverage of hard-to-count minorities in US decennial censuses
293(23)
Laurie Schwede
Rodney Terry
Jennifer Hunter Childs
15 Methodological and ethical issues arising in carrying out research with children and young people
316(31)
Sinead Hanafin
Anne Marie Brooks
Gillian Roche
Bairbre Meaney
16 Challenges in the first ever national survey of people with intellectual disabilities
347(21)
Sally Malam
Eric Emerson
Ian Davies
17 Conducting research on vulnerable and stigmatized populations
368(11)
Sandra H. Berry
Patrick P. Gunn
18 Surveying political extremists
379(20)
Timothy P. Johnson
Allyson L. Holbrook
Keith Atterberry
PART IV SAMPLING STRATEGIES FOR THE HARD TO SURVEY
399(118)
19 Probability sampling methods for hard-to-sample populations
401(23)
Graham Kalton
20 Recent developments of sampling hard-to-survey populations: an assessment
424(21)
Sunghee Lee
James Wagner
Richard Valliant
Steve Heeringa
21 Indirect sampling for hard-to-reach populations
445(23)
Pierre Lavallee
22 Sampling the Maori population using proxy screening, the Electoral Roll, and disproportionate sampling in the New Zealand Health Survey
468(17)
Robert Graham Clark
Robert Templeton
23 Network-based methods for accessing hard-to-survey populations using standard surveys
485(18)
Tyler H. Mccormick
Tian Zheng
24 Link-tracing and respondent-driven sampling
503(14)
Steve Thompson
PART V DATA COLLECTION STRATEGIES FOR THE HARD TO SURVEY
517(125)
25 Use of paid media to encourage 2010 Census participation among the hard to count
519(22)
W. Douglas Evans
A. Rupa Datta
Ting Yan
26 The hard to reach among the poor in Europe: lessons from Eurostat's EU-SILC survey in Belgium
541(14)
Ides Nicaise
Ingrid Schockaert
27 Tailored and targeted designs for hard-to-survey populations
555(20)
Marieke Haan
Yfke Ongena
28 Standardization and meaning in the survey of linguistically diversified populations: insights from the ethnographic observation of linguistic minorities in 2010 Census interviews
575(24)
Yuling Pan
Stephen Lubkemann
29 Mobilizing hard-to-survey populations to participate fully in censuses and surveys
599(20)
Timothy P. Olson
Arturo Vargas
Jerome D. Williams
30 Finding the hard to reach and keeping them engaged in research
619(23)
Kirsten Becker
Sandra H. Berry
Nate Orr
Judy Perlman
Index 642
Roger Tourangeau is a Vice President at Westat. Brad Edwards is a Vice President and Deputy Area Director at Westat. Timothy P. Johnson is Director of the Survey Research Laboratory and Professor of Public Administration at the University of Illinois, Chicago. Kirk M. Wolter is Executive Vice President, NORC at the University of Chicago and Professor, Department of Statistics, University of Chicago. Nancy Bates is a Senior Researcher for Survey Methodology at the US Census Bureau.