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E-raamat: Routledge International Handbook of Time Use Data and Methods: Time Use Research Volume 1

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This handbook, from leading international scholars, provides the most comprehensive reference work on the collection, analysis, and application of time use data. Focusing on practical knowledge of this type of data, it will be a valuable reference point for students and scholars interested in the methodological aspects of time use research.



This two-volume handbook, written by leading international scholars, provides the most comprehensive and up-to-date reference work on the collection, analysis, and application of time use data.

Time is a crucial yet finite social resource, fundamental to processes of growth, equality, and well-being. Much of the world’s essential production—raising children, preparing food, household maintenance—occurs within households, and relies on time, rather than monetary exchange, as its central input. Despite its centrality, this non-market dimension is often overlooked in official indicators. Time use diary data is increasingly recognised as the foremost source of reliable information on these key temporal dimensions of daily life.

The first volume addresses methodological issues concerning the collection and analysis of data. Readers are introduced first to general methodology and design issues, followed by an overview of major time use diary surveys that are available worldwide, and an exploration of the innovations in design that are currently under development.

With a focus on practical knowledge and understandings of how to collect, manage and analyse this type of data, it will be a valuable point of reference for students and scholars with interests in the methodological aspects of time use research, and will be relevant to numerous fields including sociology, demography, social policy, economics, gender studies, psychology, leisure studies, public health, and related disciplines. The second volume of the handbook provides an authoritative outline of the contribution of time-use research to key contemporary scholarly and policy applications in both the Global North and the Global South, and is available at www.routledge.com/9781041123972

Arvustused

"This remarkable two-volume handbook demonstrates the unique value of time use data for addressing todays most pressing social and policy challengesfrom gender equality and care to health, energy, leisure, work and economic well-being. It combines methodological rigor with breadth of application. By bringing together leading voices from around the world, it solidifies the importance of time use research for evidence-based policymaking. I hope it serves as a catalyst for new generations of research and action."

Ugo Lachapelle, President of the International Association of Time Use Research (IATUR) and Full Professor, Department of Urban Studies and Tourism, Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada

Introduction: Time use diary data a snapshot in time Section 1:
Collecting time use data
1. The History of Time Use Data Collection
2. Time
use surveys in East Asia
3. Time Use Survey Data Collection in Developing
Countries and Their Potential to Inform Public Policies 4.Progress and
Setbacks in Time Use Data Collection in Africa: an Assessment of Time Use
Surveys and Other Surveys Collecting Time Use Over the Past 25 Years
5. How
Does Information from Time-Diaries Compare With Stylized Questions
6.
Understanding the Nature of Time Use Survey Data: Data Structure and
Organization
7. The Light Diary
8. Administering Time-Diaries by Telephone:
Nearly Forty Years of Experience from Canada
9. Does Diary Mode Matter in
Time-Use Research?
10. Time Use Diary Design for Our Times: General
Principles for Online Design
11. Context is King: the MOTUS Platform for Time
Use Research
12. The Intensive Hour Technique: Random Time Sampling
13.
Testing Self-Report Time Use Diaries Against Objective Instruments in Real
Time Section 2: Aspects of time use analysis
14. Incidence of Overlapping or
Simultaneous Activities
15. Sequence Analysis of Time Use Patterns
16. Uses
of Subjective Data in Time Use Analyses
17. Moving Between Different Levels
of Hierarchical Time Use Data Files
18. The Multinational Time Use Study
19.
Beyond GDP or SDGs: The Role of Time Diary Data and Subjective Well-being in
Tracking and Driving Human Thriving n
20. The Care Economy and Unpaid Care:
Contested Definitions and Methodological Challenges
21. Methods for Valuing
the Output of Household Production Using Time Use and Other Data
22. The
Gendered Value of Unpaid Care Work: Labour Input Approach
Michael Bittman is Emeritus Professor at the University of New England, Australia. He has chaired United Nations expert committees on time use research and served as President of the International Association for Time Use Research from 2005 to 2013.

Oriel Sullivan is a Professor and Co-Director in the ESRC-funded Centre for Time Use Research (CTUR), home of the Multinational Time Use Study, at the Institute of Social Research, University College London. She was jointly responsible for the UK 20142015 Harmonised European Time Use Survey and the CTUR ELiDDI online diary design.