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E-raamat: SAGE Handbook of Survey Methodology

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  • Formaat: 740 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Jul-2016
  • Kirjastus: Sage Publications Ltd
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781473959040
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: 740 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Jul-2016
  • Kirjastus: Sage Publications Ltd
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781473959040

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Survey Methodology is becoming a more structured field of research, deserving of more and more academic attention. The SAGE Handbook of Survey Methodology explores both the increasingly scientific endeavour of surveys and their growing complexity, as different data collection modes and information sources are combined.





The handbook takes a global approach, with a team of international experts looking at local and national specificities, as well as problems of cross-national, comparative survey research. The chapters are organized into seven major sections, each of which represents a stage in the survey life-cycle:







Surveys and Societies

Planning a Survey

Measurement

Sampling

Data Collection

Preparing Data for Use

Assessing and Improving Data Quality





The SAGE Handbook of Survey Methodology is a landmark and essential tool for any scholar within the social sciences.  

Arvustused

This exciting new handbook provides a comprehensive guide to conducting survey research studies.  Authored by a distinguished set of experts from across the globe, chapters cover all phases of survey projectsfrom conceiving, designing and planning, through sampling, measurement, and data collection, to post-fieldwork data processing, data augmentation, and quality assessment.  Extensive attention to multi-national or cross-cultural survey projects is a special asset:  both challenges to comparability in such studies, and current practices to achieving it in vital domains including sampling, translation, and harmonization of data over space and time, are treated in depth.



  -- Peter V. Marsden The environment for conducting surveys has changed substantially in the last several decades.  New approaches to data collection and data dissemination are required, but the approaches must be adapted depending on country and culture.  This Sage handbook is an up-to-date reference that covers virtually all steps in the survey life cycle.  It contains methodological topics like survey modes, surveying in multicultural and cross-cultural contexts, questionnaire design and pretesting, and responsive design, along with statistical topics like sampling, weighting, analysis of complex surveys, and record linkage.  Coverage of distinctive areas, like ethical issues, surveys in conflict areas, question translation, and harmonization of questions across cultures, also set this book apart from others.  The handbook will be a valuable reference for survey practitioners and other professionals who need a broad overview of the many steps required to conduct high quality surveys.  -- Richard Valliant The new Sage Handbook broadens our view of survey research by including topics important for data sharing and reuse.  Data are expensive public resources, and we need more attention on issues like disclosure risk, harmonization, life-cycle documentation, and preservation. -- George Alter "The SAGE Handbook of Survey Methodology is a useful resource for researchers and individuals who want to learn about the process of surveying. In an era where surveying is so hotly debated, the handbook comes at an important moment in history. This book is recommended for academic libraries." -- S. Mofford * ARBA * "This thorough volume provides extensive information on understanding and creating surveys. Its 43 chapters cover important topics such as types of surveys (face-to-face, mail, internet), designing questions for surveys, sampling, administering surveys, handling ethical issues, combining administrative and survey data, and analyzing data from surveys... Summing Up: Highly recommended. Faculty and professionals" -- J. P Hoffmann * CHOICE * The SAGE Handbook of Survey Methodology is a valuable compendium and reference reflecting a broad range of expertise from the survey world and beyond.The authors of the 43 chapters represent a diverse group of institutions, mainly from the United States and Europe, and bring a deep expertise on their given "assignments. For those whose research depends on the quality of survey data, especially in an international context, the Handbook is a solid and dependable anchor. -- Joe Murphy

Part I: Basic Principles
1. Introduction - Yang-chih Fu, Dominique Joye, Tom W. Smith and Christof
Wolf
2. Survey standards - Tom W. Smith
3. Total survey error: a paradigm for survey methodology - Lars E. Lyberg and
Herbert F. Weisberg
4. Challenges of comparative survey research - Timothy P. Johnson and Michael
Braun
Part II: Surveys and Societies
5. Surveys and society - Claire Durand
6. Defining and assessing survey climate - Geert Loosveldt and Dominique Joye

7. The Ethical issues of survey and market research - Kathy Joe, Finn Raben
and Adam Phillips
8. Observations on the historical development of polling - Kathleen A.
Frankovic
Part III: Planning a Survey
9. Research question and designs for survey research - Ben Jann and Thomas
Hinz
10. Total survey error paradigm: : Theory and Practice - Paul P. Biemer
11. Survey mode or survey modes? - Edith de Leeuw and Jernej Berzelak
12. Surveying in multi-cultural and multi-national contexts - Beth-Ellen
Pennell and Kristen Cibelli-Hibben
13. Surveys in societies in turmoil - Zeina N. Mneimneh, Beth-Ellen Pennell,
Jennifer Kelley and Kristen Cibelli-Hibben
Part IV: Measurement
14. What does Measurement Mean in a Survey Context? - Jaak Billiet
15. Cognitive models of answering processes - Kristen Miller and Gordon B.
Willis
16. Designing questions and questionnaires - Jolene D. Smyth
17. Creating a good question: how to use cumulative experience - Melanie
Revilla, Diana Zavala-Rojas and Willem Saris
18. Designing a mixed-mode survey - Don A. Dillman and Michelle L. Edwards
19. The Translation of Measurement Instruments for Cross-cultural Surveys -
Dorothée Behr and Kuniaki Shishido
20. When Translation is not Enough: Background Variables in Comparative
Surveys - Silke Schneider, Dominique Joye and Christof Wolf
Part V: Sampling
21. Basics of sampling for survey research - Yves Tillé and Alina Matei
22. Nonprobability sampling - Vasja Vehovar, Vera Toepoel and Stephanie
Steinmetz
23. Special challenges of sampling for comparative surveys - Siegfried Gabler
and Sabine Häder
Part VI: Data Collection
24. Questionnaire pretesting - Gordon B. Willis
25. Survey fieldwork - Annelies G. Blom
26. Responsive and adaptive designs - François Laflamme and James Wagner
27. Unit nonresponse - Ineke A. L. Stoop
28. Incentives as a possible measure to increase response rates - Michèle
Ernst Stähli and Dominique Joye
Part VII: Preparing Data for Use
29. Documenting Survey Data Across the Life Cycle - Mary Vardigan, Peter
Granda and Lynette Hoelter
30. Weighting: principles and practicalities - Pierre Lavallée and
Jean-François Beaumont
31. Analysis of data from stratified and clustered surveys - Stephanie Eckman
and Brady T. West
32. Analytical Potential Versus Data Confidentiality Finding the Optimal
Balance - Heike Wirth
33. Harmonizing Survey Questions Between Cultures and Over Time - Christof
Wolf, Silke L. Schneider, Dorothée Behr and Dominique Joye
Part VIII: Assessing and Improving Data Quality
34. Survey data quality and measurement precision - Duane F. Alwin
35. Nonresponse error: detection and correction - Jelke Bethlehem and Barry
Schouten
36. Response styles in surveys: understanding their causes and mitigating
their impact - Caroline Roberts
37. Dealing with missing values - Martin Spiess
38. Another Look at Survey Data Quality - Victor Thiessen and Jörg Blasius
39. Assessment of cross-cultural comparability - Jan Cieciuch, Eldad Davidov,
Peter Schmidt and René Algesheimer
Part IX: Further Issues
40. Data preservation, secondary analysis, and replication: learning from
existing data - Lynette Hoelter, Amy Pienta and Jared Lyle
41. Record linkage - Rainer Schnell
42. Supplementing cross-national surveys with contextual data - Jessica
Fortin-Rittberger, David Howell, Stephen Quinlan and Bojan Todosijevic
43. The Globalization of surveys - Tom W. Smith and Yang-chih Fu
Tom W. Smith specializes in the study of societal change in comparative perspective. He is director of the Center for the Study of Politics and Society at NORC, University of Chicago. Since 1980, he has been a principal investigator of the National Data Program for the Social Sciences and director of its General Social Survey (GSS).

He is also cofounder of the International Social Survey Program (ISSP). It has conducted an international survey annually since 1985 and has involved 60 nations. He was Secretary General of ISSP in 19972003.

Smith has taught at Purdue University, Northwestern University, the University of Chicago, Tel Aviv University, and the University of Cologne.

He was awarded the 2000 and 2003 Innovators Awards of the American Association for Public Opinion Research (AAPOR), the 2002 AAPOR Award for Exceptionally Distinguished Achievement, and the 2013 AAPOR Book Award as coeditor of Multinational, Multicultural, and Multiregional Survey Methods.