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Appendix of Sources=I
Editor's Introduction: Social Surveys - An Overview=IX
PART ONE. DEFINING SURVEYS
1. The Nature of Surveys/David A. de Vaus=3
PART TWO. METHODOLOGICAL CONTEXT
Section One. Paradigms and Surveys
2. The Debate About Quantitative and Qualitative Research: A Question of Method or Epistemology?/Alan Bryman=13
3. Functionalism and the Survey: The Relation of Theory and Method/Jennifer Platt=30
4. Gender, Methodology and People's Ways of Knowing: Some Problems with Feminism and the Paradigm Debate in Social Science/Ann Oakley=60
5. Instrumental Positivism in American Sociology/Christopher G.A. Bryant=84
6. Problems with Surveys: Method or Epistemology?/Catherine Marsh=93
Section Two. Social Surveys and Explanation
7. Sociological Analysis and the "Variable"/Herbert Blumer=110
8. Adequacy at the Level of Meaning/Catherine Marsh=120
PART THREE. ETHICAL CONTEXT
Section One. General Principles
9. The Belmont Report: Ethical Principles and Guidelines for the Protection of Human Subjects of Research: The National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research=139
Section Two. Privacy, Confidentiality and Consent
10. Sampling Strategies and the Threat to Privacy/Shirley Foster Hartley=150
11. Technical and Administrative Procedures: Panel on Confidentiality and Data Access=165
PART FOUR. INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXT
12. A Historical Perspective on the Institutional Bases for Survey Research in the United States/Stephen E. Fienberg;Judith M. Tanur=181
13. Social Science Research and Policy-Making in Britain/Martin Bulmer=201
14. Establishing a Dialogue/G. Clare Wenger=216
15. Social Research and Market Research: A Critique of a Policy/Geoff Payne=235
16. Social Research and Market Research: A Critique of a Critique/Martin Harrop=245
PART FIVE. RESEARCH DESIGNS
Section One. The Role of Design and Types of Design
17. Some Observations on Study Design/Samuel A. Stouffer=255
Section Two. Cross-Sectional Designs
18. Cross-Sectional Designs/David A. de Vaus=265
19. Household Panel Studies: An Overview/David Rose=280
20. Studying Social Change with Survey Data: Examples from Louis Harris Surveys/Stanley Presser=284
Section Three. Panel Designs
21. Issues of Design and Analysis of Surveys Across Time/Greg J. Duncan;Graham Kalton=292
Section Four. Official Statistics
22. Generating New Information: United States General Accounting Office=319
23. Why Don't Sociologists Make More Use of Official Statistics?/Martin Bulmer=334
영문목차
PART SIX. COLLECTING SURVEY DATA
Section One. Face-to-Face Interviews
24. Research on Interviewing Techniques/Charles F. Cannell;Peter V. Miller;Lois Oksenberg=3
25. Understanding the Standardized - Non-Standardized Interviewing Controversy/Paul Beatty=42
Section Two. Telephone Surveys
26. Theories and Methods of Telephone Surveys/Robert M. Groves=57
27. Computer-Assisted Telephone Interviewing: A General Introduction/William L. Nicholls II=76
28. Sampling for UK Telephone Surveys/Martin Collins=85
Section Three. Mail Surveys
29. The Design and Administration of Mail Surveys/Don A. Dillman=90
30. Towards a Theory of Self-Administered Questionnaire Design/Cleo R. Jenkins;Don A. Dillman=116
Section Four. Internet Surveys
31. A Review of Issues and Approaches/Mick P. Couper=149
32. Statement About Internet Polls/NCPP Polling Review Board=180
33. Measuring Response Rates in Online Surveys/Bill MacElroy=182
Section Five. E-Mail Surveys
34. Using E-Mail To Survey Internet Users in the United States: Methodology and Assessment/Kim Bartel Sheehan;Mariea Grubbs Hoy=185
35. Internet Research: Council of American Survey Research Organizations=204
36. Privacy Issues in Internet Surveys/Hyunyi Cho;Robert LaRose=206
37. Spam and Research on the Internet/Charles Colby=223
Section Six. Mixed-Mode Surveying
38. Mixed-Mode Surveys/Don A. Dillman=225
Section Seven. Data Sharing and Secondary Analysis
39. Making Effective Use of Existing Survey Data/K. Jill Kiecolt;Laura E. Nathan=250
PART SEVEN. SAMPLING
Section One. History
40. Sampling in the Twenty-First Century/Seymour Sudman;Edward Blair=273
41. Some History and Reminiscences on Survey Sampling/Morris H. Hansen=289
Section Two. Types
42. Statisticians Can Be Creative Too/James Rothman;Dawn Mitchell=308
43. Horses for Courses: How Survey Firms in Different Countries Measure Public Opinion With Very Different Methods/Humphrey Taylor;Louis Harris;Associates=323
PART EIGHTY. SURVEY ERROR
44. On Errors in Surveys/W. Edwards Deming=335
45. Research On Survey Data Quality/Robert M. Groves=350
PART NINE. MEASUREMENT ERROR
Section One. Nature of Measurement Error
46. Dirty Data Britain and the USA: The Reliability of "Invariant" Characteristics Reported in Surveys/E. M. Schreiber=369
47. Convergent and Discriminant Validation by the Multitraity-Multimethod Matrix/Donald T. Campbell;Donald W. Fiske=383
영문목차
PART NINE. MEASUREMENT ERROR
Section One. Nature of Measurement Error
48. Income Measurement Error in Surveys: A Review/Jeffrey C. Moore;Linda L. Stinson;Edward J. Welniak, Jr.=3
Section Two. Measurement Error from Respondent
49. Some Effects of "Social Desirability" in Survey Studies/Derek L. Phillips;Kevin J. Clancy=37
50. Response Bias in Surveys of Mental Health: An Empirical Investigation/Walter R. Gove;Michael R. Geerken=56
51. Acquiescence and Recency Response-Order Effects in Interview Surveys/McKee J. McClendon=84
Section Three. Measurement Error from Interviewer
52. A Field Study of Interviewer Effects on the Quality of Survey Date/J.J. Feldman;Harbert Hyman;C.W. Hart=118
53. Social Distance and Interviewer Effects/Barbara Snell Dohrenwend;John Colombotos;Bruce P. Dohrenwend=142
Section Four. Measurement Error from Mode
54. The Impact of the Presence of Others on a Respondent's Answers to Questions/Tom W. Smith=155
55. The Effect of Computer-Assisted Interviewing on Data Quality: A Review/Edith D. de Leeuw;Joop J. Hox;Ger Snijkers=170
56. Effects of Interview Mode on Measuring Depression in Younger Adults/William S. Aquilino=192
Section Five. Measurement Error from Instrument
57. The Effect of the Question on Survey Responses: A Review/Graham Kalton;Howard Schuman=209
Section Six. Measurement Error from Design
58. The Reliability of Recall Data: A Literature Review/Shirley Dex=257
59. How Comparative is Comparative Research?/Roger Jowell=283
60. Problems of Functional Equivalence of Measurements in Multinational Surveys/Duane F. Alwin;Michael Braun;Janet Harkness;Jacqueline Scott=293
61. The Critique of Official Statistics/Ian Miles;John Irvine=303
Section Seven. Processing Effects
62. Improving Coding Reliability for Open-Ended Questions/Andrew C. Montgomery;Kathleen S. Crittenden=318
Section Eight. Reducing Measurement Error
63. The In-Depth Testing of Survey Questions: A Critical Appraisal of Methods/William Foddy=328
64. Improving Survey Quality Through Pretesting/Theresa J. DeMaio;Jennifer Rothgeb;Jennifer Hess=338
PART TEN. COVERAGE ERROR
Section One. Telephone Surveys
65. Coverage Errors Occurring Before Sample Selection: Federal Committee on Statistical Methodology, Subcommittee on Survey Coverage=355
66. Call Screening: Is it Really a Problem for Survey Research?/Michael W. Link;Robert W. Oldendick=393
67. Improving Random Respondent Selection in Telephone Surveys/Diane O'Rourke;Johnny Blair=404
PART TEN. COVERAGE ERROR
Section Two. Using Quota Samples
68. Testing Nine Hypotheses About Quota Sampling/Catherine Marsh;Elinor Scarbrough=3
Section Three. Rare Populations
69. New Developments in the Sampling of Special Populations/Seymour Sudman;Graham Kalton=20
PART ELEVEN. SAMPLING ERROR
Section One. Sample Size
70. Sample Size: How Much is Enough?/Homer W. Austin=51
Section Two. Sample Type
71. Probability Sampling with Quotas/Seymour Sudman=58
PART TWELVE. NONRESPONSE ERROR
72. Survey Nonresponse, Measurement Error, and Data Quality: An Introduction/Johannes van der Zouwen;Edith D. de Leeuw=87
Section One. Bias
73. Socio-Demographic Determinants of Response/John Goyder=93
74. The Hidden 25 Percent: An Analysis of Nonresponse on the 1980 General Social Survey/Tom W. Smith=108
Section Two. Response Rates and Nonresponse
75. International Response Trends: Results of an International Survey/Wim de Heer=126
76. Trends in Non-Response Rates/Tom W. Smith=142
77. A Comparison of Nonresponse in Mail, Telephone, and Face-to-Face Surveys/Joop J. Hox;Edith D. de Leeuw=157
78. Understanding the Decision to Participate in a Survey/Robert M. Groves;Robert B. Cialdini;Mick P. Couper=172
79. The Decline in Survey Response: A Social Values Interpretation/John Goyder;Jean McKenzie Leiper=191
80. Leverage-Saliency Theory of Survey Participation/Robert M. Groves;Eleanor Singer;Amy Corning=211
Section Three. Factors Affecting Response/Nonresponse
81. Respondent Burden: A Test of Some Common Assumptions/Laure M. Sharp;Joanne Frankel=221
82. The Effect of Questionnaire Length on Response Rates: A Review of the Literature/Karen Bogen=238
83. Prenotification and Mail Survey Response Rates: A Quantitative Integration of the Literature/Bodo B. Schlegelmilch;Adamantios Diamantopoulos=249
84. Estimating the Effect of Incentives on Mail Survey Response Rates: A Meta-Analysis/Allan H. Church=264
85. Informed Consent and Survey Response: A Summary of the Empirical Literature/Eleanor Singer=280
86. Factors Affecting Response Rates to Mailed Questionnaires: A Qualitative Analysis of the Published Literature/Thomas A. Heberlein;Robert Baumgartner=296
87. Interviewers' Tactics for Fighting Survey Nonresponse/Ger Snijkers;Joop J. Hox;Edith D. de Leeuw=318
88. An Overview of Nonresponse Issues in Telephone Surveys/Robert M. Groves;Lars E. Lyberg=334
89. Strategies for Reducing Nonresponse in a Longitudinal Panel Survey/Heather Laurie;Rachel Smith;Lynne Scott=355
Section Four. Reducing Nonresponse Error
90. Nonresponse in Sociological Surveys: A Review of Some Methods for Handling the Problem/Wayne W. Daniel=372
Section Five. Missing Data
91. Interpreting the Effects of Missing Data in Survey Research/John D. Hutcheson, Jr.;James E. Prather=384
92. Reducing Missing Data in Surveys: An Overview of Methods/Edith D. de Leeuw=393
93. Minimizing Error Variance Introduced by Missing Data Routines in Survey Analysis/Bradley R. Hertel=408
Section Six. Weighting for Nonresponse
94. Weighting to Adjust for Survey Nonresponse/Carol H. Fuller=421
95. When to Weight: Determining Nonresponse Bias in Survey Data/Lewis Mandell=429
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Social Surveys is the methods bible for social scientists using survey methods. It provides an unparalleled guide to the state of knowledge in the field and a key asset in practical survey know-how.
A key method of information gathering in the social sciences, surveys provide a structured or systematic set of data. They explore issues of motivation, belief, social, political and economic practices and habits of life. Survey research seeks to discover what causes some phenomena by looking at variation in variables across cases and identifying characteristics that are systematically linked with it.
In these four volumes, the distinguished author on research methods, David De Vaus has combed through the literature to provide readers with the essential contributions in the field. The collection is divided into 11 sections, making it a comprehensive guide to all social scientists using surveys:
1 Methodological Context of Surveys
This section examines the qualitative-quantitative dichotomy; functionalism; feminism and positivism. The contributors include Alan Bryman on the debate about qualitative and quantitative research; Jennifer Platt on the relation between theory and method in functionalism; Anne Oakley on gender and people's ways of knowing; Christopher Bryant on instrumental positivism in the American Tradition; Marsh on survey epistemology and the adequacy of meaning; Blumer on sociological analysis and the `variable'.
2 Ethical Context
This section is devoted to general ethical principles in survey research; privacy, confidentiality and consent; and disclosure in releasing tables and microdata sets. The contributors include Hartley on sampling and the threat to privacy; the Panel on Confidentiality and Data Access on private lives and public policies; Willenberg and de Waal on statistical disclosure control in practice.
3 Institutional Contexts
This section explores the institutional location of survey research; the development of social survey institutions; research for government and using market research companies for academic research. Among the contributors are Fienberg and Tanur on a historical perspective on the institutional bases for survey research; Bulmer on social science research and policy-making in Britain; Wegner on establishing a dialogue and Payne and Harrop on social research and market research.
4 Research Designs
This section examines the role of design and types of design; cross sectional designs; panel designs; comparative designs and official statistics. Included here are Stouffer on study design; Rose on household panel studies; Presser on social change; Duncan and Kalton on issues of design and analysis of surveys across time; Cantor on substantive implications of longitudinal design features; Mitchell on survey materials collected in the developing countries; the United States General Accounting Office on generating new information; and Bulmer on why sociologists do not make more use of official statistics.
5 Collecting Survey Data
This section provides a critical overview of face-to-face interviews, telephone surveys, sampling, mail surveys, internet surveys, e-mail surveys, mixed mode surveying and data-sharing and secondary analysis. The contributors include Cannell and Miller on researching interviewing techniques; Beatty on understanding the standardized//non-standardized interviewing controversy; Groves on theories and methods of telephone surveys; Nicholls on computer-assisted telephone interviewing; Collins on sampling in telephone surveys; Dillman on the design and administration of mail surveys; Jenkins and Dillman on self-administered questionnaire design; Couper on web surveys; the National Council on Public Polls on Internet polls; MacElroy on measuring response rates in online surveys; Sheehan and Hoy on using e-mail surveys; Cho and LaRose on privacy issues in Internet survey work; Dillman on mixed mode approaches; and Kiecolt and Nathan on secondary analysis of survey data.
6 Sampling
This section explores the history and types of sampling. The contributions include Sudman and Blair on sampling in the Twenty-First Century; Hansen on the development of survey sampling; Rothman and Mitchell on creativity and statistics; and Taylor on comparative methods of public opinion research.
7 Survey Error
This section considers the nature and sources of survey error and includes contributions from Deming on survey errors and Groves on research on survey data quality
8 Measurement Error
The section examines issues of reliability, validity, social desirability, acquiescence; social distance, gender, design based error, processing effects and reducing measurement error. The contributors are Schrieber on the reliability of `invariant' characteristics reported in surveys; Campbell and Fiske on convergent and discriminant validation by the multitrait-multimethod matrix; Phillips and Clancy on some effects of `social desirability' in survey work; Grove and Geerken on response bias; McClendon on acquiescence and response order effects in interview surveys; Feldman and Hyman on interviewer effects; Northrup on gender of interviewer effects; de Leeuw and Hox on the effect of computer-assisted interviewing on data quality; Kalton and Schuman on the effect of the question on survey responses; Dex on the reliability of recall data; Jowell on the character of comparative research; Miles and Irvine on the faults of official statistics; Montgomery and Crittenden on improving coding reliability for open ended questions; Foddy on the in-depth testing of survey questions; and DeMaio on improving survey quality through pretesting.
9 Coverage Error
This section investigates the extent to which surveys can access the required population. It examines coverage by telephone surveys, with quota samples and for rare populations. It includes contributions from the subcommittee of survey coverage on coverage errors occuring before sample selection; Link and Oldendick on call screening; O'Rourke and Blair on random respondent selection in telephone surveys; Marsh and Scarbrough on quota sampling; and Sudman and Kalton on sampling special populations.
10 Sampling Error
This section examines sample size and sample type. It includes contributions from Austin on sample size and Sudman on probability sampling with quotas.
11 Non Response Error
This section is devoted to questions of bias, mode effects and theories of non response. Contributors include van der Zouwen and de Leeuw on survey non response, measurement error and data quality; Goyder on socio-demographic determinants of response; Hawkins on the estimation of non response bias; Hox and de Leeuw on non response in mail, telephone and face-to-face surveys; Sharp and Frankel on respondent burden; Bogen on the effect of questionnaire length; Church on the effect of incentives on mail survey response rates; and Singer on informed consent and survey reponse; Snijkers, Hox et al on interviewers tactics for fighting survey non-response; Groves and Lyberg on non response issues in telephone surveys; Laurie, Smith et al on strategies for reducing non response in longitudinal panel surveys; Hertel on minimizing error variance; and Fuller on weighting to adjust non survey response.
The collection will be of interest to students throughout the social sciences, and practitioners in sociology, political science, cultural studies, business studies and social research methods.
About the Editor
David De Vaus is Associate Professor of Sociology at La Trobe University, Melbourne. He is the author of Surveys in Social Research and Research Design in Social Research. He is an international authority in the field of social research.
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