4 datasets found
  1. American Housing Survey, 2015 National Data, Including an Arts and Culture...

    • icpsr.umich.edu
    ascii, delimited +5
    Updated Mar 5, 2019
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    United States. Bureau of the Census (2019). American Housing Survey, 2015 National Data, Including an Arts and Culture Module [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR36801.v1
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    spss, sas, r, ascii, delimited, excel, stataAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 5, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Researchhttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/pages/
    Authors
    United States. Bureau of the Census
    License

    https://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/36801/termshttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/36801/terms

    Time period covered
    2015
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    The 2015 American Housing Survey marks the first release of a newly integrated national sample and independent metropolitan area samples. The 2015 release features many variable name revisions, as well as the integration of an AHS Codebook Interactive Tool available on the U.S. Census Bureau We site. This data collection provides information on the characteristics of a national sample of housing units in 2015, including apartments, single-family homes, mobile homes, and vacant housing units. Data from the 15 largest metropolitan areas in the United States are included in the national sample survey (the AHS 2015 Metropolitan Data are also available as ICPSR 36805). The data are presented in three separate parts: Part 1, Household Record (Main Record), Part 2, Person Record, and Part 3, Project Record. Household Record data includes questions about household occupancy and tenure, household exterior and interior structural features, household equipment and appliances, housing problems, housing costs, home improvement, neighborhood features, recent moving information, income, and basic demographic information. The household record data also features four rotating topical modules: Arts and Culture, Food Security, Housing Counseling, and Healthy Homes. Person Record data includes questions about personal disabilities, income, and basic demographic information. Finally, the Project Record data includes questions about home improvement projects. Specific questions were asked about the types of projects, costs, funding sources, and year of completion.

  2. g

    American Housing Survey, 2007: National Microdata - Version 1

    • search.gesis.org
    Updated Apr 17, 2007
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    United States Department of Commerce. Bureau of the Census (2007). American Housing Survey, 2007: National Microdata - Version 1 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR23563.v1
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 17, 2007
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS search
    ICPSR - Interuniversity Consortium for Political and Social Research
    Authors
    United States Department of Commerce. Bureau of the Census
    License

    https://search.gesis.org/research_data/datasearch-httpwww-da-ra-deoaip--oaioai-da-ra-de447754https://search.gesis.org/research_data/datasearch-httpwww-da-ra-deoaip--oaioai-da-ra-de447754

    Description

    Abstract (en): This data collection provides information on the characteristics of a national sample of housing units, including apartments, single-family homes, mobile homes, and vacant housing units. Unlike previous years, the data are presented in seven separate parts: Part 1, Work Done Record (Replacement or Additions to the House), Part 2, Journey to Work Record, Part 3, Mortgages (Owners Only), Part 4, Housing Unit Record (Main Record), Recodes (One Record per Housing Unit), and Weights, Part 5, Manager and Owner Record (Renters Only), Part 6, Person Record, Part 7, Mover Group Record. Data include year the structure was built, type and number of living quarters, occupancy status, access, number of rooms, presence of commercial establishments on the property, and property value. Additional data focus on kitchen and plumbing facilities, types of heating fuel used, source of water, sewage disposal, heating and air-conditioning equipment, and major additions, alterations, or repairs to the property. Information provided on housing expenses includes monthly mortgage or rent payments, cost of services such as utilities, garbage collection, and property insurance, and amount of real estate taxes paid in the previous year. Also included is information on whether the household received government assistance to help pay heating or cooling costs or for other energy-related services. Similar data are provided for housing units previously occupied by respondents who had recently moved. Additionally, indicators of housing and neighborhood quality are supplied. Housing quality variables include privacy of bedrooms, condition of kitchen facilities, basement or roof leakage, breakdowns of plumbing facilities and equipment, and overall opinion of the structure. For quality of neighborhood, variables include use of exterminator services, existence of boarded-up buildings, and overall quality of the neighborhood. In addition to housing characteristics, some demographic data are provided on household members, such as age, sex, race, marital status, income, and relationship to householder. Additional data provided on the householder include years of school completed, Spanish origin, length of residence, and length of occupancy. Please review the "Sample Status, Weights, Interview Status" section in the ICPSR codebook for this American Housing Survey study, as well as Appendix B in CURRENT HOUSING REPORTS, 2007, included with this collection. ICPSR data undergo a confidentiality review and are altered when necessary to limit the risk of disclosure. ICPSR also routinely creates ready-to-go data files along with setups in the major statistical software formats as well as standard codebooks to accompany the data. In addition to these procedures, ICPSR performed the following processing steps for this data collection: Checked for undocumented or out-of-range codes.. Housing Units in the United States. The 2007 national data are from a sample of housing units interviewed between April and September 2007. The same basic sample of housing units is interviewed every 2 years until a new sample is selected. The United States Census Bureau updates the sample by adding newly constructed housing units and units discovered through coverage improvement efforts. For the 2007 American Housing Survey--National sample (AHS-N), approximately 60,000 sample housing units were originally selected for interview. Due to budgetary constraints, roughly 8 percent of these units were taken out of the sample and were not interviewed in 2007. These reduced units are eligible for reinstatement in future enumerations. About 2,150 of the remaining 55,000 total units included for interview were found to be ineligible because the unit no longer existed or because the units did not meet the AHS-N definition of a housing unit. Of the 52,850 eligible sample units, about 6,550 were classified (both occupied and vacant housing units), as ''Type A'' noninterviews because (a) no one was at home after repeated visits, (b) the respondent refused to be interviewed, or (c) the interviewer was unable to find the unit. This classification produced an unweighted overall response rate of 88 percent. The weighted overall response rate was 89 percent. computer-assisted personal interview (CAPI)Beginning in 1997, the methods of collecting and processing American Housing Survey (AHS) data were redesigned. All interviews are conducted using computer-assisted personal interviewing (CAPI) ...

  3. Survey of Consumer Finances

    • federalreserve.gov
    Updated Oct 18, 2023
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    Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Board (2023). Survey of Consumer Finances [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.17016/8799
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 18, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Federal Reserve Board of Governors
    Federal Reserve Systemhttp://www.federalreserve.gov/
    Authors
    Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Board
    Time period covered
    1962 - 2023
    Description

    The Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF) is normally a triennial cross-sectional survey of U.S. families. The survey data include information on families' balance sheets, pensions, income, and demographic characteristics.

  4. C

    COVID-19 Household Telephone Survey in Barbados - Round 2: 2020

    • data.iadb.org
    csv, dta, pdf
    Updated Apr 10, 2025
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    IDB Datasets (2025). COVID-19 Household Telephone Survey in Barbados - Round 2: 2020 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.60966/z9hg-kx29
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    csv(165160), dta(1376869), csv(440704), csv(3962), dta(178251), csv(6096), pdf(1824167)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 10, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    IDB Datasets
    License

    Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 2020
    Area covered
    Barbados
    Description

    This dataset constitutes a panel follow-up to the 2016 Barbados Survey of Living Conditions. It measures welfare related variables before and after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic including labor market outcomes, financial literacy, and food security. The survey was executed in November 2020. The Barbados COVID-19 Survey is a project of the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB). It collected data on critical socioeconomic topics in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic to support policymaking and help mitigate the crisis impacts on the populations welfare. The first survey round recontacted households interviewed in 2016 by the Barbados Survey of Living Conditions (BSLC) and was conducted by phone due to the mobility restrictions and social distancing measures in place. It interviewed 896 households and all their members over 29 days during May and June 2020 and gathered information about disease transmission, household finances, labor, income, remittances, spending, and social protection programs. Data and documentation of this first round can be found at: https://publications.iadb.org/en/covid-19-household-telephone-survey-barbados. The second round was carried out in November 2020 and recontacted respondent households from the first round. It focused on labor and interviewed 758 households. Both Barbados COVID-19 Survey rounds were designed and implemented by Sistemas Integrales. This publication describes the second rounds main methodological aspects, such as sample design, estimation procedures, topics covered by the questionnaire, field organization and quality control. It also presents the structure and codebook for the two resulting datasets.

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United States. Bureau of the Census (2019). American Housing Survey, 2015 National Data, Including an Arts and Culture Module [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR36801.v1
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American Housing Survey, 2015 National Data, Including an Arts and Culture Module

Explore at:
spss, sas, r, ascii, delimited, excel, stataAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
Mar 5, 2019
Dataset provided by
Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Researchhttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/pages/
Authors
United States. Bureau of the Census
License

https://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/36801/termshttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/36801/terms

Time period covered
2015
Area covered
United States
Description

The 2015 American Housing Survey marks the first release of a newly integrated national sample and independent metropolitan area samples. The 2015 release features many variable name revisions, as well as the integration of an AHS Codebook Interactive Tool available on the U.S. Census Bureau We site. This data collection provides information on the characteristics of a national sample of housing units in 2015, including apartments, single-family homes, mobile homes, and vacant housing units. Data from the 15 largest metropolitan areas in the United States are included in the national sample survey (the AHS 2015 Metropolitan Data are also available as ICPSR 36805). The data are presented in three separate parts: Part 1, Household Record (Main Record), Part 2, Person Record, and Part 3, Project Record. Household Record data includes questions about household occupancy and tenure, household exterior and interior structural features, household equipment and appliances, housing problems, housing costs, home improvement, neighborhood features, recent moving information, income, and basic demographic information. The household record data also features four rotating topical modules: Arts and Culture, Food Security, Housing Counseling, and Healthy Homes. Person Record data includes questions about personal disabilities, income, and basic demographic information. Finally, the Project Record data includes questions about home improvement projects. Specific questions were asked about the types of projects, costs, funding sources, and year of completion.

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