51 datasets found
  1. c

    Garden and Demographic Surveys of the Was Valley, Southern Highlands of...

    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    • beta.ukdataservice.ac.uk
    Updated Nov 28, 2024
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    Sillitoe, P., University of Durham (2024). Garden and Demographic Surveys of the Was Valley, Southern Highlands of Papua, New Guinea, 1973-1997 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-6425-1
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 28, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Department of Anthropology
    Authors
    Sillitoe, P., University of Durham
    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 1973 - Dec 1, 1997
    Area covered
    Papua New Guinea
    Variables measured
    Individuals, Subnational
    Measurement technique
    Face-to-face interview, Physical measurements
    Description

    Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.


    This research project had the following five interrelated objectives:
    • to further understanding of political and economic arrangements in noncapitalist
      contexts (or more narrowly, political and economic anthropology)
    • to contribute to comparative political-economic thought by testing Western
      philosophical assumptions against acephalous arrangements
    • to advance further the investigation of a Highland New Guinea political economy (one of the most thorough inquiries into such a regime yet attempted)
    • to make an innovative contribution to ethnographic research methods and analysis using recent developments in information technology and escience
    • to explore what an alternative acephalous view of development might comprise and future opportunities to advance this through local participation
    The ethnographic data produced for the project encompass land use, demography, genealogical and biographical information and other ethnography.

    Further information may be found on the Was Valley Anthropological Archive web site, and on the From Production to Transaction: Challenging Political-Economic Assumptions ESRC award web page.


    Main Topics:

    The gardens dataset contains the following information: garden particulars (locality, age class, social status, kin group, homestead/consumption unit), land tenure details (kin group territory, relation to kin group, clearance sequence, changes between surveys, garden total area (square metres), local assessment of garden size, number), cropping details (times cultivated, garden type, cultivation status, crop occurrence, local assessment of crop variety) and site characteristics (distance (mins), enclosure, aspect (degrees), slope (degrees), slope form, altitude (metres), vegetation).

    The demographic dataset contains the following information: census date, respondent gender, age, census sheet number, homestead/consumption unit, house reference numbers, kin group, relation to territorial kin group, relation to homestead holder, geographical locality name, and second house information (if relevant).

  2. f

    Appendix S1 - Potential Gains in Reproductive-Aged Life Expectancy by...

    • plos.figshare.com
    docx
    Updated Jun 1, 2023
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    Vladimir Canudas-Romo; Li Liu; Linnea Zimmerman; Saifuddin Ahmed; Amy Tsui (2023). Appendix S1 - Potential Gains in Reproductive-Aged Life Expectancy by Eliminating Maternal Mortality: A Demographic Bonus of Achieving MDG 5 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0086694.s001
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    docxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 1, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    PLOS ONE
    Authors
    Vladimir Canudas-Romo; Li Liu; Linnea Zimmerman; Saifuddin Ahmed; Amy Tsui
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The reproductive-aged life expectancy. (DOCX)

  3. f

    Table S1 - Mortality Risk and Survival in the Aftermath of the Medieval...

    • plos.figshare.com
    docx
    Updated Jun 3, 2023
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    Sharon N. DeWitte (2023). Table S1 - Mortality Risk and Survival in the Aftermath of the Medieval Black Death [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0096513.s001
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    docxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 3, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    PLOS ONE
    Authors
    Sharon N. DeWitte
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Site codes and contexts for all individuals included in the study. All individuals are curated at the Museum of London Centre for Human Bioarchaeology. (DOCX)

  4. f

    Agency sample details.

    • plos.figshare.com
    xls
    Updated Nov 1, 2023
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    Cris Hughes; An-Di Yim; Chelsey Juarez; John Servello; Richard Thomas; Nicholas Passalacqua; Angela Soler (2023). Agency sample details. [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0290302.t001
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    xlsAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 1, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    PLOS ONE
    Authors
    Cris Hughes; An-Di Yim; Chelsey Juarez; John Servello; Richard Thomas; Nicholas Passalacqua; Angela Soler
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Forensic anthropology is shifting to reflect on the impact of its practices within the criminal justice context in important ways. Here, we contribute to this essential work by examining how decedent demographics as well as estimations of biological profile components are related to identification trends in forensic anthropology cases. The study uses data from more than 1,200 identified and unidentified forensic anthropology cases from three agencies (together representing a nation-wide sample). We found the following: i) multivariate analyses indicated that decedent sex, age, and race and/or ethnicity are not related to case identification rates in the pooled United States sample, ii) when identification rate differences do occur, they appear to be smaller effects, more agency-specific, and/or related to the context of a particular agency, iii) for the agency-specific sample with available data, there was no consistent evidence for a discrepancy in the duration of an identification investigation based on a decedent’s sex, age, or race and/or ethnicity, iv) forensic anthropological estimations of sex, age, and ancestry can improve the odds of identification for decedents, although these are small effects, and v) reporting an ancestry estimation does not appear to impact decedent race representation among resolved unidentified person cases. Although previous studies have identified demographic discrepancies in other areas of the criminal justice system, the results presented here suggest that decedent demographic estimation practices by forensic anthropologists in general do not appear to be related to discrepancies in identification trends, but more research is needed to examine whether these findings hold. Contextual factors and practices specific to each investigative agency likely contribute to identification trends.

  5. g

    Explaining Low Fertility in Italy (ELFI) - Version 1

    • search.gesis.org
    Updated Feb 16, 2021
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    Kertzer, David (2021). Explaining Low Fertility in Italy (ELFI) - Version 1 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR31881.v1
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 16, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS search
    ICPSR - Interuniversity Consortium for Political and Social Research
    Authors
    Kertzer, David
    License

    https://search.gesis.org/research_data/datasearch-httpwww-da-ra-deoaip--oaioai-da-ra-de449860https://search.gesis.org/research_data/datasearch-httpwww-da-ra-deoaip--oaioai-da-ra-de449860

    Area covered
    Italy
    Description

    Abstract (en): The ethnographic fieldwork portion of the project - interviews with women of reproductive age, and when available their partners and mothers - was initiated and completed in 2006. For each of four Italian cities (Padua, Bologna, Cagliari, and Naples) studied ethnographically by trained anthropologists, both a working-class and a middle-class neighborhood were identified. These interviews (349 in number) have been transcribed without identifiers. All interviews have been coded and assigned 'attributes' (or nominative variables, such as gender, civil/religious status of marriage, etc.) using the qualitative data analysis software (NVIVO), and these reside in secure electronic project folders. This large body of qualitative interview data is now complete and ready for use across the international collaborative units. Preliminary research reveals the particular significance of family ties in Italy, the fundamental role played by gender systems, and the specific cultural, socio-economic, and politic contexts in which fertility behavior and parenting are embedded. Please see the study website for more information. The surprisingly deep drop in Italian birth rates to among the lowest in the world (total fertility rate of 1.3 or below) has dramatically challenged existing social science theory by appearing to contradict population experts' predictions of where such very low "below replacement" fertility would emerge. This interdisciplinary research project, known as "ELFI" (Explaining Low Fertility in Italy), has made considerable inroads into understanding the puzzle of "lowest-low" Italian fertility, reevaluating theories of reproduction and human behavior more generally. Through the use of innovative methodologies, an international team of collaborators from anthropology, sociology, and demography has produced key findings using both statistical, quantitative methods and extensive ethnographic, qualitative methods. Four Italian cities were studied ethnographically by trained anthropologists. In each, both a working-class and a middle-class neighborhood were identified, and participants were selected. Women of reproductive age in four Italian cities (Padua, Bologna, Cagliari, and Naples). Smallest Geographic Unit: city Anthropologists selected 50 women aged 23-45 in each of four Italian cities. Half of these women were of younger reproductive ages (23-32) and half from older ages (33-45). In addition, in each cohort, half of the women were from a working-class neighborhood and half from a middle-class neighborhood, of varying levels of education and parity. Interviews were also conducted (when possible) with the woman's mother and with the woman's husband or cohabiting partner. The interviewees were selected through personal contacts identified through an indirect snowballing procedure with multiple entries (independently selected initial contacts) in order to avoid a clustered sample. The final sample of interviews consists of 233 women (aged 23-45), 49 mothers, and 67 partners, for a total of 349 interviews. The indirect snowball sampling procedure allowed us to stratify the sample by age, parity, and marital status of the woman in order to maximize variation in socio-demographic characteristics. To facilitate analysis, each of the 349 interviews was recorded, transcribed, and examined using the computer program Nvivo8. Funding insitution(s): United States Department of Health and Human Services. National Institutes of Health. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (R01 HD048715). National Science Foundation (BCS 0418443). face-to-face interviewAccording to the principal investigator, direct identifiers have been removed. But the transcripts are in Italian, so we were not able to determine the potential for indirect identifiers. As such, the data is restricted.

  6. m

    Demirjian's 8 teeth method for Dental age estimation in Nepalese population

    • data.mendeley.com
    Updated Aug 21, 2020
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    Nuwadatta Subedi (2020). Demirjian's 8 teeth method for Dental age estimation in Nepalese population [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.17632/b2ggyx3zfk.1
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 21, 2020
    Authors
    Nuwadatta Subedi
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    It is a dataset of the study conducted with objectives of applying Demirjian’s 8 teeth method to estimate age in the Nepalese Population. We had used the Orthopantomographs of Nepalese people of age above five and less than 23 years. The radiographs were compared to the ‘Tooth Development Chart’ and each tooth studied was assigned with any one of the 10 developmental stages using Demirijian’s 8 teeth method and total maturity scores determined from them.

  7. f

    Female and Male Perspectives on the Neolithic Transition in Europe: Clues...

    • plos.figshare.com
    tiff
    Updated May 31, 2023
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    Rita Rasteiro; Lounès Chikhi (2023). Female and Male Perspectives on the Neolithic Transition in Europe: Clues from Ancient and Modern Genetic Data [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0060944
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    tiffAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 31, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    PLOS ONE
    Authors
    Rita Rasteiro; Lounès Chikhi
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Europe
    Description

    The arrival of agriculture into Europe during the Neolithic transition brought a significant shift in human lifestyle and subsistence. However, the conditions under which the spread of the new culture and technologies occurred are still debated. Similarly, the roles played by women and men during the Neolithic transition are not well understood, probably due to the fact that mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and Y chromosome (NRY) data are usually studied independently rather than within the same statistical framework. Here, we applied an integrative approach, using different model-based inferential techniques, to analyse published datasets from contemporary and ancient European populations. By integrating mtDNA and NRY data into the same admixture approach, we show that both males and females underwent the same admixture history and both support the demic diffusion model of Ammerman and Cavalli-Sforza. Similarly, the patterns of genetic diversity found in extant and ancient populations demonstrate that both modern and ancient mtDNA support the demic diffusion model. They also show that population structure and differential growth between farmers and hunter-gatherers are necessary to explain both types of data. However, we also found some differences between male and female markers, suggesting that the female effective population size was larger than that of the males, probably due to different demographic histories. We argue that these differences are most probably related to the various shifts in cultural practices and lifestyles that followed the Neolithic Transition, such as sedentism, the shift from polygyny to monogamy or the increase of patrilocality.

  8. r

    International Journal Of Social Welfare And Management FAQ -...

    • researchhelpdesk.org
    Updated May 25, 2022
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    Research Help Desk (2022). International Journal Of Social Welfare And Management FAQ - ResearchHelpDesk [Dataset]. https://www.researchhelpdesk.org/journal/faq/69/international-journal-of-social-welfare-and-management
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    Dataset updated
    May 25, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Research Help Desk
    Description

    International Journal Of Social Welfare And Management FAQ - ResearchHelpDesk - International Journal Of Social Welfare And Management has become evident that major social forces of a global nature - such as demographic trends, migration patterns and the globalization of the economy - are reshaping social welfare policies and social work practices the world over. There is much to be learned from the careful analysis of experiences in the various countries that are struggling with the emerging challenges to social welfare in the post-modern world. The Journal of Social Welfare and Management (ISSN 0975-0231) (Registered with Registrar of Newspapers for India: DELENG/2012/50859) seek to encourage debate about the global implications of the most pressing social welfare issues of the day. Its interdisciplinary approach will promote examination of these issues from the various branches of the applied social sciences and integrate analyses of policy and practice. Since this journal is multidisciplinary, quality papers from various disciplines such as Economics, Management, Demography, Political science, Geography, Psychology, Literature, History, Anthropology, Sociology, Labor Management, Communication and women related issues are considering.

  9. f

    A comparison of the decedent demographic and case identification details of...

    • plos.figshare.com
    xls
    Updated Nov 1, 2023
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    Cris Hughes; An-Di Yim; Chelsey Juarez; John Servello; Richard Thomas; Nicholas Passalacqua; Angela Soler (2023). A comparison of the decedent demographic and case identification details of the three agencies. [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0290302.t003
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    xlsAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 1, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    PLOS ONE
    Authors
    Cris Hughes; An-Di Yim; Chelsey Juarez; John Servello; Richard Thomas; Nicholas Passalacqua; Angela Soler
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    A comparison of the decedent demographic and case identification details of the three agencies.

  10. i

    World Values Survey - Wave 7, 2021 - Maldives

    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    • catalog.ihsn.org
    Updated Aug 28, 2024
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    The World Values Survey (WVS) (2024). World Values Survey - Wave 7, 2021 - Maldives [Dataset]. https://datacatalog.ihsn.org/catalog/12285
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 28, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    The World Values Survey (WVS)
    Time period covered
    2021
    Area covered
    Maldives
    Description

    Abstract

    The World Values Survey (WVS) is an international research program devoted to the scientific and academic study of social, political, economic, religious and cultural values of people in the world. The project’s goal is to assess which impact values stability or change over time has on the social, political and economic development of countries and societies. The project grew out of the European Values Study and was started in 1981 by its Founder and first President (1981-2013) Professor Ronald Inglehart from the University of Michigan (USA) and his team, and since then has been operating in more than 120 world societies. The main research instrument of the project is a representative comparative social survey which is conducted globally every 5 years. Extensive geographical and thematic scope, free availability of survey data and project findings for broad public turned the WVS into one of the most authoritative and widely-used cross-national surveys in the social sciences. At the moment, WVS is the largest non-commercial cross-national empirical time-series investigation of human beliefs and values ever executed.

    The project’s overall aim is to analyze people’s values, beliefs and norms in a comparative cross-national and over-time perspective. To reach this aim, project covers a broad scope of topics from the field of Sociology, Political Science, International Relations, Economics, Public Health, Demography, Anthropology, Social Psychology and etc. In addition, WVS is the only academic study which covers the whole scope of global variations, from very poor to very rich societies in all world’s main cultural zones.

    The WVS combines two institutional components. From one side, WVS is a scientific program and social research infrastructure that explores people’s values and beliefs. At the same time, WVS comprises an international network of social scientists and researchers from 120 world countries and societies. All national teams and individual researchers involved into the implementation of the WVS constitute the community of Principal Investigators (PIs). All PIs are members of the WVS.

    The WVS seeks to help scientists and policy makers understand changes in the beliefs, values and motivations of people throughout the world. Thousands of political scientists, sociologists, social psychologists, anthropologists and economists have used these data to analyze such topics as economic development, democratization, religion, gender equality, social capital, and subjective well-being. The WVS findings have proved to be valuable for policy makers seeking to build civil society and stable political institutions in developing countries. The WVS data is also frequently used by governments around the world, scholars, students, journalists and international organizations such as the World Bank, World Health Organization (WHO), United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the United Nations Headquarters in New York (USA). The WVS data has been used in thousands of scholarly publications and the findings have been reported in leading media such as Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, The Economist, the World Development Report, the World Happiness Report and the UN Human Development Report.

    The World Values Survey Association is governed by the Executive Committee, the Scientific Advisory Committee, and the General Assembly, under the terms of the Constitution.

    Strategic goals for the 7th wave included:

    Expansion of territorial coverage from 60 countries in WVS-6 to 80 in WVS-7; Deepening collaboration within the international development community; Deepening collaboration within NGOs, academic institutions and research foundations; Updating the WVS-7 questionnaire with new topics & items covering new social phenomena and emerging processes of value change; Expanding the 7th wave WVS with data useful for monitoring the SDGs; Expanding capacity and resources for survey fieldwork in developing countries. The 7th wave continued monitoring cultural values, attitudes and beliefs towards gender, family, and religion; attitudes and experience of poverty; education, health, and security; social tolerance and trust; attitudes towards multilateral institutions; cultural differences and similarities between regions and societies. In addition, the WVS-7 questionnaire has been elaborated with the inclusion of such new topics as the issues of justice, moral principles, corruption, accountability and risk, migration, national security and global governance.

    For more information on the history of the WVSA, visit https://www.worldvaluessurvey.org/WVSContents.jsp ›Who we are › History of the WVSA.

    Geographic coverage

    Maldives.

    The WVS has just completed wave 7 data that comprises 64 surveys conducted in 2017-2022. With 64 countries and societies around the world and more than 80,000 respondents, this is the latest resource made available for the research community.

    The WVS-7 survey was launched in January 2017 with Bolivia becoming the first country to conduct WVS-7. In the course of 2017 and 2018, WVS-7 has been conducted in the USA, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Ecuador, Peru, Andorra, Greece, Serbia, Romania, Turkey, Russia, Germany, Thailand, Australia, Malaysia, Indonesia, China, Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan, Nigeria, Iraq and over dozen of other world countries. Geographic coverage has also been expanded to several new countries included into the WVS for the first time, such as Bolivia, Greece, Macao SAR, Maldives, Myanmar, Nicaragua, and Tajikistan.

    Analysis unit

    Household, Individual

    Sampling procedure

    The sample type preferable for using in the World Values Survey is a full probability sample of the population aged 18 years and older. A detailed description of the sampling methodology is provided in the country specific sample design documentation available for download from WVS.

    A detailed description of the sampling methodology is provided in the Maldives 2021 sample design documentation available for download from WVS and also from the Downloads section of the metadata.

    Mode of data collection

    Computer Assisted Personal Interview [capi]

    Research instrument

    The survey was fielded in the following language(s): Dhivehi. The questionnaire is available for download from the WVS website.

  11. w

    An Osteological Analysis of the Scott's Lake Bluff Population

    • data.wu.ac.at
    • data.amerigeoss.org
    pdf
    Updated Jan 1, 1973
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    Department of the Interior (1973). An Osteological Analysis of the Scott's Lake Bluff Population [Dataset]. https://data.wu.ac.at/schema/data_gov/YTAxZjk3YjgtMmZiNS00NGQwLTg1YjMtN2NjMDIzOTVhYzA5
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    pdfAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 1, 1973
    Dataset provided by
    Department of the Interior
    Area covered
    72ad25e1f9f4a11494391bc2e7fbd4aaf6a800f7
    Description

    Archeologists and physical anthropologists have coordinated their research efforts toward an understanding of the biological population in its cultural setting for many decades. This coordination has taken many forms depending upon the interests and concerns of the physical anthropologistand of the archeologist. Some of these efforts are typological analyses of the skeletal material (Neumann 1952); others are biological tables attached to archeological reports; and others are f u l l y coordinated research such as that done by William Bass in the Plains area (Bass, Evans and Jantz 1971).It is the latter approach that is attempted in this report on the skeletal material from the Scott's Lake Bluff Site (38CR35). The physical anthropology studies are centered around the examination of the relationships between the biological and the cultural development of the population. We have attempted to employ studies of non-metric, discontinuous, and genetic traits along with the cultural forms of treatment of people at death, and the l i f e patterns of these people (Armelagos 1968; Binford 1971; Finnegan1973; Sublett 1972). The study of this relationship calls for an examination and analysis of such features as form and location of burial , relationship of sex and age at time of death, body preparation, articulation, number of individuals per b u r i a l , orientation, position and inclusions i f any (Sprague 1968). Binford (1971) stresses the importance of attempting to confer the"organizational properties" of the cultural system under study through the analysis of burial practices as parts of a system with variables affecting them. It is in these areas that we have concentrated our efforts in theanalysis of the Scott's Lake Bluff Site (38CR35).

  12. f

    Gift-Giving and Network Structure in Rural China: Utilizing Long-Term...

    • plos.figshare.com
    docx
    Updated Jun 1, 2023
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    Xi Chen (2023). Gift-Giving and Network Structure in Rural China: Utilizing Long-Term Spontaneous Gift Records [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0102104
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    docxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 1, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    PLOS ONE
    Authors
    Xi Chen
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    China
    Description

    The tradition of keeping written records of gift received during household ceremonies in many countries offers researchers an underutilized means of data collection for social network analysis. This paper first summarizes unique features of the gift record data that circumvent five prevailing sampling and measurement issues in the literature, and we discuss their advantages over existing studies at both the individual level and the dyadic link level using previous data sources. We then document our research project in rural China that implements a multiple wave census-type household survey and a long-term gift record collection. The pattern of gift-giving in major household social events and its recent escalation is analyzed. There are significantly positive correlations between gift network centrality and various forms of informal insurance. Finally, economic inequality and competitive marriage market are among the main demographic and socioeconomic determinants of the observed gift network structure.

  13. i

    World Values Survey - Wave 7, 2018 - Mexico

    • catalog.ihsn.org
    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    Updated Aug 28, 2024
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    The World Values Survey (WVS) (2024). World Values Survey - Wave 7, 2018 - Mexico [Dataset]. https://catalog.ihsn.org/catalog/12286
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 28, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    The World Values Survey (WVS)
    Time period covered
    2018
    Area covered
    Mexico
    Description

    Abstract

    The World Values Survey (WVS) is an international research program devoted to the scientific and academic study of social, political, economic, religious and cultural values of people in the world. The project’s goal is to assess which impact values stability or change over time has on the social, political and economic development of countries and societies. The project grew out of the European Values Study and was started in 1981 by its Founder and first President (1981-2013) Professor Ronald Inglehart from the University of Michigan (USA) and his team, and since then has been operating in more than 120 world societies. The main research instrument of the project is a representative comparative social survey which is conducted globally every 5 years. Extensive geographical and thematic scope, free availability of survey data and project findings for broad public turned the WVS into one of the most authoritative and widely-used cross-national surveys in the social sciences. At the moment, WVS is the largest non-commercial cross-national empirical time-series investigation of human beliefs and values ever executed.

    The project’s overall aim is to analyze people’s values, beliefs and norms in a comparative cross-national and over-time perspective. To reach this aim, project covers a broad scope of topics from the field of Sociology, Political Science, International Relations, Economics, Public Health, Demography, Anthropology, Social Psychology and etc. In addition, WVS is the only academic study which covers the whole scope of global variations, from very poor to very rich societies in all world’s main cultural zones.

    The WVS combines two institutional components. From one side, WVS is a scientific program and social research infrastructure that explores people’s values and beliefs. At the same time, WVS comprises an international network of social scientists and researchers from 120 world countries and societies. All national teams and individual researchers involved into the implementation of the WVS constitute the community of Principal Investigators (PIs). All PIs are members of the WVS.

    The WVS seeks to help scientists and policy makers understand changes in the beliefs, values and motivations of people throughout the world. Thousands of political scientists, sociologists, social psychologists, anthropologists and economists have used these data to analyze such topics as economic development, democratization, religion, gender equality, social capital, and subjective well-being. The WVS findings have proved to be valuable for policy makers seeking to build civil society and stable political institutions in developing countries. The WVS data is also frequently used by governments around the world, scholars, students, journalists and international organizations such as the World Bank, World Health Organization (WHO), United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the United Nations Headquarters in New York (USA). The WVS data has been used in thousands of scholarly publications and the findings have been reported in leading media such as Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, The Economist, the World Development Report, the World Happiness Report and the UN Human Development Report.

    The World Values Survey Association is governed by the Executive Committee, the Scientific Advisory Committee, and the General Assembly, under the terms of the Constitution.

    Strategic goals for the 7th wave included:

    Expansion of territorial coverage from 60 countries in WVS-6 to 80 in WVS-7; Deepening collaboration within the international development community; Deepening collaboration within NGOs, academic institutions and research foundations; Updating the WVS-7 questionnaire with new topics & items covering new social phenomena and emerging processes of value change; Expanding the 7th wave WVS with data useful for monitoring the SDGs; Expanding capacity and resources for survey fieldwork in developing countries. The 7th wave continued monitoring cultural values, attitudes and beliefs towards gender, family, and religion; attitudes and experience of poverty; education, health, and security; social tolerance and trust; attitudes towards multilateral institutions; cultural differences and similarities between regions and societies. In addition, the WVS-7 questionnaire has been elaborated with the inclusion of such new topics as the issues of justice, moral principles, corruption, accountability and risk, migration, national security and global governance.

    For more information on the history of the WVSA, visit https://www.worldvaluessurvey.org/WVSContents.jsp ›Who we are › History of the WVSA.

    Geographic coverage

    Mexico.

    The WVS has just completed wave 7 data that comprises 64 surveys conducted in 2017-2022. With 64 countries and societies around the world and more than 80,000 respondents, this is the latest resource made available for the research community.

    The WVS-7 survey was launched in January 2017 with Bolivia becoming the first country to conduct WVS-7. In the course of 2017 and 2018, WVS-7 has been conducted in the USA, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Ecuador, Peru, Andorra, Greece, Serbia, Romania, Turkey, Russia, Germany, Thailand, Australia, Malaysia, Indonesia, China, Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan, Nigeria, Iraq and over dozen of other world countries. Geographic coverage has also been expanded to several new countries included into the WVS for the first time, such as Bolivia, Greece, Macao SAR, Maldives, Myanmar, Nicaragua, and Tajikistan.

    Analysis unit

    Household, Individual

    Sampling procedure

    The sample type preferable for using in the World Values Survey is a full probability sample of the population aged 18 years and older. A detailed description of the sampling methodology is provided in the country specific sample design documentation available for download from WVS.

    A detailed description of the sampling methodology is provided in the Mexico 2018 sample design documentation available for download from WVS and also from the Downloads section of the metadata.

    Mode of data collection

    Paper Assisted Personal Interview [papi]

    Research instrument

    The survey was fielded in the following language(s): Spanish. The questionnaire is available for download from the WVS website.

  14. r

    International Journal Of Social Welfare And Management Acceptance Rate -...

    • researchhelpdesk.org
    Updated Feb 15, 2022
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    Research Help Desk (2022). International Journal Of Social Welfare And Management Acceptance Rate - ResearchHelpDesk [Dataset]. https://www.researchhelpdesk.org/journal/acceptance-rate/69/international-journal-of-social-welfare-and-management
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Feb 15, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Research Help Desk
    Description

    International Journal Of Social Welfare And Management Acceptance Rate - ResearchHelpDesk - International Journal Of Social Welfare And Management has become evident that major social forces of a global nature - such as demographic trends, migration patterns and the globalization of the economy - are reshaping social welfare policies and social work practices the world over. There is much to be learned from the careful analysis of experiences in the various countries that are struggling with the emerging challenges to social welfare in the post-modern world. The Journal of Social Welfare and Management (ISSN 0975-0231) (Registered with Registrar of Newspapers for India: DELENG/2012/50859) seek to encourage debate about the global implications of the most pressing social welfare issues of the day. Its interdisciplinary approach will promote examination of these issues from the various branches of the applied social sciences and integrate analyses of policy and practice. Since this journal is multidisciplinary, quality papers from various disciplines such as Economics, Management, Demography, Political science, Geography, Psychology, Literature, History, Anthropology, Sociology, Labor Management, Communication and women related issues are considering.

  15. i

    World Values Survey - Wave 7, 2018 - Hong Kong SAR

    • catalog.ihsn.org
    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    Updated Oct 12, 2023
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    The World Values Survey (WVS) (2023). World Values Survey - Wave 7, 2018 - Hong Kong SAR [Dataset]. https://catalog.ihsn.org/catalog/11577
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 12, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    The World Values Survey (WVS)
    Time period covered
    2018
    Area covered
    Hong Kong
    Description

    Abstract

    The World Values Survey (WVS) is an international research program devoted to the scientific and academic study of social, political, economic, religious and cultural values of people in the world. The project’s goal is to assess which impact values stability or change over time has on the social, political and economic development of countries and societies. The project grew out of the European Values Study and was started in 1981 by its Founder and first President (1981-2013) Professor Ronald Inglehart from the University of Michigan (USA) and his team, and since then has been operating in more than 120 world societies. The main research instrument of the project is a representative comparative social survey which is conducted globally every 5 years. Extensive geographical and thematic scope, free availability of survey data and project findings for broad public turned the WVS into one of the most authoritative and widely-used cross-national surveys in the social sciences. At the moment, WVS is the largest non-commercial cross-national empirical time-series investigation of human beliefs and values ever executed.

    The project’s overall aim is to analyze people’s values, beliefs and norms in a comparative cross-national and over-time perspective. To reach this aim, project covers a broad scope of topics from the field of Sociology, Political Science, International Relations, Economics, Public Health, Demography, Anthropology, Social Psychology and etc. In addition, WVS is the only academic study which covers the whole scope of global variations, from very poor to very rich societies in all world’s main cultural zones.

    The WVS combines two institutional components. From one side, WVS is a scientific program and social research infrastructure that explores people’s values and beliefs. At the same time, WVS comprises an international network of social scientists and researchers from 120 world countries and societies. All national teams and individual researchers involved into the implementation of the WVS constitute the community of Principal Investigators (PIs). All PIs are members of the WVS.

    The WVS seeks to help scientists and policy makers understand changes in the beliefs, values and motivations of people throughout the world. Thousands of political scientists, sociologists, social psychologists, anthropologists and economists have used these data to analyze such topics as economic development, democratization, religion, gender equality, social capital, and subjective well-being. The WVS findings have proved to be valuable for policy makers seeking to build civil society and stable political institutions in developing countries. The WVS data is also frequently used by governments around the world, scholars, students, journalists and international organizations such as the World Bank, World Health Organization (WHO), United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the United Nations Headquarters in New York (USA). The WVS data has been used in thousands of scholarly publications and the findings have been reported in leading media such as Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, The Economist, the World Development Report, the World Happiness Report and the UN Human Development Report.

    The World Values Survey Association is governed by the Executive Committee, the Scientific Advisory Committee, and the General Assembly, under the terms of the Constitution.

    Strategic goals for the 7th wave included:

    Expansion of territorial coverage from 60 countries in WVS-6 to 80 in WVS-7; Deepening collaboration within the international development community; Deepening collaboration within NGOs, academic institutions and research foundations; Updating the WVS-7 questionnaire with new topics & items covering new social phenomena and emerging processes of value change; Expanding the 7th wave WVS with data useful for monitoring the SDGs; Expanding capacity and resources for survey fieldwork in developing countries. The 7th wave continued monitoring cultural values, attitudes and beliefs towards gender, family, and religion; attitudes and experience of poverty; education, health, and security; social tolerance and trust; attitudes towards multilateral institutions; cultural differences and similarities between regions and societies. In addition, the WVS-7 questionnaire has been elaborated with the inclusion of such new topics as the issues of justice, moral principles, corruption, accountability and risk, migration, national security and global governance.

    For more information on the history of the WVSA, visit https://www.worldvaluessurvey.org/WVSContents.jsp ›Who we are › History of the WVSA.

    Geographic coverage

    Hong Kong SAR.

    The WVS has just completed wave 7 data that comprises 64 surveys conducted in 2017-2022. With 64 countries and societies around the world and more than 80,000 respondents, this is the latest resource made available for the research community.

    The WVS-7 survey was launched in January 2017 with Bolivia becoming the first country to conduct WVS-7. In the course of 2017 and 2018, WVS-7 has been conducted in the USA, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Ecuador, Peru, Andorra, Greece, Serbia, Romania, Turkey, Russia, Germany, Thailand, Australia, Malaysia, Indonesia, China, Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan, Nigeria, Iraq and over dozen of other world countries. Geographic coverage has also been expanded to several new countries included into the WVS for the first time, such as Bolivia, Greece, Macao SAR, Maldives, Myanmar, Nicaragua, and Tajikistan.

    Analysis unit

    Household, Individual

    Sampling procedure

    The sample type preferable for using in the World Values Survey is a full probability sample of the population aged 18 years and older. A detailed description of the sampling methodology is provided in the country specific sample design documentation available for download from WVS.

    A detailed description of the sampling methodology is provided in the Hong Kong SAR 2018 sample design documentation available for download from WVS and also from the Downloads section of the metadata.

    Mode of data collection

    Face-to-face [f2f]

    Research instrument

    The survey was fielded in the following language(s): Cantonese, English, Putonghua. The questionnaire is available for download from the WVS website.

  16. i

    World Values Survey - Wave 7, 2019 - Tunisia

    • catalog.ihsn.org
    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    Updated Aug 28, 2024
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    The World Values Survey (WVS) (2024). World Values Survey - Wave 7, 2019 - Tunisia [Dataset]. https://catalog.ihsn.org/catalog/12308
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Aug 28, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    The World Values Survey (WVS)
    Time period covered
    2019
    Area covered
    Tunisia
    Description

    Abstract

    The World Values Survey (WVS) is an international research program devoted to the scientific and academic study of social, political, economic, religious and cultural values of people in the world. The project’s goal is to assess which impact values stability or change over time has on the social, political and economic development of countries and societies. The project grew out of the European Values Study and was started in 1981 by its Founder and first President (1981-2013) Professor Ronald Inglehart from the University of Michigan (USA) and his team, and since then has been operating in more than 120 world societies. The main research instrument of the project is a representative comparative social survey which is conducted globally every 5 years. Extensive geographical and thematic scope, free availability of survey data and project findings for broad public turned the WVS into one of the most authoritative and widely-used cross-national surveys in the social sciences. At the moment, WVS is the largest non-commercial cross-national empirical time-series investigation of human beliefs and values ever executed.

    The project’s overall aim is to analyze people’s values, beliefs and norms in a comparative cross-national and over-time perspective. To reach this aim, project covers a broad scope of topics from the field of Sociology, Political Science, International Relations, Economics, Public Health, Demography, Anthropology, Social Psychology and etc. In addition, WVS is the only academic study which covers the whole scope of global variations, from very poor to very rich societies in all world’s main cultural zones.

    The WVS combines two institutional components. From one side, WVS is a scientific program and social research infrastructure that explores people’s values and beliefs. At the same time, WVS comprises an international network of social scientists and researchers from 120 world countries and societies. All national teams and individual researchers involved into the implementation of the WVS constitute the community of Principal Investigators (PIs). All PIs are members of the WVS.

    The WVS seeks to help scientists and policy makers understand changes in the beliefs, values and motivations of people throughout the world. Thousands of political scientists, sociologists, social psychologists, anthropologists and economists have used these data to analyze such topics as economic development, democratization, religion, gender equality, social capital, and subjective well-being. The WVS findings have proved to be valuable for policy makers seeking to build civil society and stable political institutions in developing countries. The WVS data is also frequently used by governments around the world, scholars, students, journalists and international organizations such as the World Bank, World Health Organization (WHO), United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the United Nations Headquarters in New York (USA). The WVS data has been used in thousands of scholarly publications and the findings have been reported in leading media such as Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, The Economist, the World Development Report, the World Happiness Report and the UN Human Development Report.

    The World Values Survey Association is governed by the Executive Committee, the Scientific Advisory Committee, and the General Assembly, under the terms of the Constitution.

    Strategic goals for the 7th wave included:

    Expansion of territorial coverage from 60 countries in WVS-6 to 80 in WVS-7; Deepening collaboration within the international development community; Deepening collaboration within NGOs, academic institutions and research foundations; Updating the WVS-7 questionnaire with new topics & items covering new social phenomena and emerging processes of value change; Expanding the 7th wave WVS with data useful for monitoring the SDGs; Expanding capacity and resources for survey fieldwork in developing countries. The 7th wave continued monitoring cultural values, attitudes and beliefs towards gender, family, and religion; attitudes and experience of poverty; education, health, and security; social tolerance and trust; attitudes towards multilateral institutions; cultural differences and similarities between regions and societies. In addition, the WVS-7 questionnaire has been elaborated with the inclusion of such new topics as the issues of justice, moral principles, corruption, accountability and risk, migration, national security and global governance.

    For more information on the history of the WVSA, visit https://www.worldvaluessurvey.org/WVSContents.jsp ›Who we are › History of the WVSA.

    Geographic coverage

    Tunisia.

    The WVS has just completed wave 7 data that comprises 64 surveys conducted in 2017-2022. With 64 countries and societies around the world and more than 80,000 respondents, this is the latest resource made available for the research community.

    The WVS-7 survey was launched in January 2017 with Bolivia becoming the first country to conduct WVS-7. In the course of 2017 and 2018, WVS-7 has been conducted in the USA, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Ecuador, Peru, Andorra, Greece, Serbia, Romania, Turkey, Russia, Germany, Thailand, Australia, Malaysia, Indonesia, China, Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan, Nigeria, Iraq and over dozen of other world countries. Geographic coverage has also been expanded to several new countries included into the WVS for the first time, such as Bolivia, Greece, Macao SAR, Maldives, Myanmar, Nicaragua, and Tajikistan.

    Analysis unit

    Household, Individual

    Sampling procedure

    The sample type preferable for using in the World Values Survey is a full probability sample of the population aged 18 years and older. A detailed description of the sampling methodology is provided in the country specific sample design documentation available for download from WVS.

    A detailed description of the sampling methodology is provided in the Tunisia 2019 sample design documentation available for download from WVS and also from the Downloads section of the metadata.

    Mode of data collection

    Computer Assisted Personal Interview [capi]

    Research instrument

    The survey was fielded in the following language(s): Arabic. The questionnaire is available for download from the WVS website.

  17. i

    World Values Survey - Wave 7, 2019 - Philippines

    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    • catalog.ihsn.org
    Updated Aug 28, 2024
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    The World Values Survey (WVS) (2024). World Values Survey - Wave 7, 2019 - Philippines [Dataset]. https://datacatalog.ihsn.org/catalog/12297
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Aug 28, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    The World Values Survey (WVS)
    Time period covered
    2019
    Area covered
    Philippines
    Description

    Abstract

    The World Values Survey (WVS) is an international research program devoted to the scientific and academic study of social, political, economic, religious and cultural values of people in the world. The project’s goal is to assess which impact values stability or change over time has on the social, political and economic development of countries and societies. The project grew out of the European Values Study and was started in 1981 by its Founder and first President (1981-2013) Professor Ronald Inglehart from the University of Michigan (USA) and his team, and since then has been operating in more than 120 world societies. The main research instrument of the project is a representative comparative social survey which is conducted globally every 5 years. Extensive geographical and thematic scope, free availability of survey data and project findings for broad public turned the WVS into one of the most authoritative and widely-used cross-national surveys in the social sciences. At the moment, WVS is the largest non-commercial cross-national empirical time-series investigation of human beliefs and values ever executed.

    The project’s overall aim is to analyze people’s values, beliefs and norms in a comparative cross-national and over-time perspective. To reach this aim, project covers a broad scope of topics from the field of Sociology, Political Science, International Relations, Economics, Public Health, Demography, Anthropology, Social Psychology and etc. In addition, WVS is the only academic study which covers the whole scope of global variations, from very poor to very rich societies in all world’s main cultural zones.

    The WVS combines two institutional components. From one side, WVS is a scientific program and social research infrastructure that explores people’s values and beliefs. At the same time, WVS comprises an international network of social scientists and researchers from 120 world countries and societies. All national teams and individual researchers involved into the implementation of the WVS constitute the community of Principal Investigators (PIs). All PIs are members of the WVS.

    The WVS seeks to help scientists and policy makers understand changes in the beliefs, values and motivations of people throughout the world. Thousands of political scientists, sociologists, social psychologists, anthropologists and economists have used these data to analyze such topics as economic development, democratization, religion, gender equality, social capital, and subjective well-being. The WVS findings have proved to be valuable for policy makers seeking to build civil society and stable political institutions in developing countries. The WVS data is also frequently used by governments around the world, scholars, students, journalists and international organizations such as the World Bank, World Health Organization (WHO), United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the United Nations Headquarters in New York (USA). The WVS data has been used in thousands of scholarly publications and the findings have been reported in leading media such as Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, The Economist, the World Development Report, the World Happiness Report and the UN Human Development Report.

    The World Values Survey Association is governed by the Executive Committee, the Scientific Advisory Committee, and the General Assembly, under the terms of the Constitution.

    Strategic goals for the 7th wave included:

    Expansion of territorial coverage from 60 countries in WVS-6 to 80 in WVS-7; Deepening collaboration within the international development community; Deepening collaboration within NGOs, academic institutions and research foundations; Updating the WVS-7 questionnaire with new topics & items covering new social phenomena and emerging processes of value change; Expanding the 7th wave WVS with data useful for monitoring the SDGs; Expanding capacity and resources for survey fieldwork in developing countries. The 7th wave continued monitoring cultural values, attitudes and beliefs towards gender, family, and religion; attitudes and experience of poverty; education, health, and security; social tolerance and trust; attitudes towards multilateral institutions; cultural differences and similarities between regions and societies. In addition, the WVS-7 questionnaire has been elaborated with the inclusion of such new topics as the issues of justice, moral principles, corruption, accountability and risk, migration, national security and global governance.

    For more information on the history of the WVSA, visit https://www.worldvaluessurvey.org/WVSContents.jsp ›Who we are › History of the WVSA.

    Geographic coverage

    Philippines.

    The WVS has just completed wave 7 data that comprises 64 surveys conducted in 2017-2022. With 64 countries and societies around the world and more than 80,000 respondents, this is the latest resource made available for the research community.

    The WVS-7 survey was launched in January 2017 with Bolivia becoming the first country to conduct WVS-7. In the course of 2017 and 2018, WVS-7 has been conducted in the USA, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Ecuador, Peru, Andorra, Greece, Serbia, Romania, Turkey, Russia, Germany, Thailand, Australia, Malaysia, Indonesia, China, Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan, Nigeria, Iraq and over dozen of other world countries. Geographic coverage has also been expanded to several new countries included into the WVS for the first time, such as Bolivia, Greece, Macao SAR, Maldives, Myanmar, Nicaragua, and Tajikistan.

    Analysis unit

    Household, Individual

    Sampling procedure

    The sample type preferable for using in the World Values Survey is a full probability sample of the population aged 18 years and older. A detailed description of the sampling methodology is provided in the country specific sample design documentation available for download from WVS.

    A detailed description of the sampling methodology is provided in the Philippines 2019 sample design documentation available for download from WVS and also from the Downloads section of the metadata.

    Mode of data collection

    Paper Assisted Personal Interview [papi]

    Research instrument

    The survey was fielded in the following language(s): Bikol, Cebuano, Filipino, Ikolo,Tausug, Waray, Hiligaynon. The questionnaire is available for download from the WVS website.

  18. D30+/D5+ values and their 95% confidence intervals for the pre- and...

    • plos.figshare.com
    xls
    Updated Jun 6, 2023
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    Sharon N. DeWitte (2023). D30+/D5+ values and their 95% confidence intervals for the pre- and post-Black Death samples. [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0096513.t002
    Explore at:
    xlsAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 6, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    PLOShttp://plos.org/
    Authors
    Sharon N. DeWitte
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    D30+/D5+ values and their 95% confidence intervals for the pre- and post-Black Death samples.

  19. i

    World Values Survey - Wave 7, 2017 - United States

    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    • catalog.ihsn.org
    Updated Aug 28, 2024
    + more versions
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    The World Values Survey (WVS) (2024). World Values Survey - Wave 7, 2017 - United States [Dataset]. https://datacatalog.ihsn.org/catalog/12312
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Aug 28, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    The World Values Survey (WVS)
    Time period covered
    2017
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Abstract

    The World Values Survey (WVS) is an international research program devoted to the scientific and academic study of social, political, economic, religious and cultural values of people in the world. The project’s goal is to assess which impact values stability or change over time has on the social, political and economic development of countries and societies. The project grew out of the European Values Study and was started in 1981 by its Founder and first President (1981-2013) Professor Ronald Inglehart from the University of Michigan (USA) and his team, and since then has been operating in more than 120 world societies. The main research instrument of the project is a representative comparative social survey which is conducted globally every 5 years. Extensive geographical and thematic scope, free availability of survey data and project findings for broad public turned the WVS into one of the most authoritative and widely-used cross-national surveys in the social sciences. At the moment, WVS is the largest non-commercial cross-national empirical time-series investigation of human beliefs and values ever executed.

    The project’s overall aim is to analyze people’s values, beliefs and norms in a comparative cross-national and over-time perspective. To reach this aim, project covers a broad scope of topics from the field of Sociology, Political Science, International Relations, Economics, Public Health, Demography, Anthropology, Social Psychology and etc. In addition, WVS is the only academic study which covers the whole scope of global variations, from very poor to very rich societies in all world’s main cultural zones.

    The WVS combines two institutional components. From one side, WVS is a scientific program and social research infrastructure that explores people’s values and beliefs. At the same time, WVS comprises an international network of social scientists and researchers from 120 world countries and societies. All national teams and individual researchers involved into the implementation of the WVS constitute the community of Principal Investigators (PIs). All PIs are members of the WVS.

    The WVS seeks to help scientists and policy makers understand changes in the beliefs, values and motivations of people throughout the world. Thousands of political scientists, sociologists, social psychologists, anthropologists and economists have used these data to analyze such topics as economic development, democratization, religion, gender equality, social capital, and subjective well-being. The WVS findings have proved to be valuable for policy makers seeking to build civil society and stable political institutions in developing countries. The WVS data is also frequently used by governments around the world, scholars, students, journalists and international organizations such as the World Bank, World Health Organization (WHO), United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the United Nations Headquarters in New York (USA). The WVS data has been used in thousands of scholarly publications and the findings have been reported in leading media such as Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, The Economist, the World Development Report, the World Happiness Report and the UN Human Development Report.

    The World Values Survey Association is governed by the Executive Committee, the Scientific Advisory Committee, and the General Assembly, under the terms of the Constitution.

    Strategic goals for the 7th wave included:

    Expansion of territorial coverage from 60 countries in WVS-6 to 80 in WVS-7; Deepening collaboration within the international development community; Deepening collaboration within NGOs, academic institutions and research foundations; Updating the WVS-7 questionnaire with new topics & items covering new social phenomena and emerging processes of value change; Expanding the 7th wave WVS with data useful for monitoring the SDGs; Expanding capacity and resources for survey fieldwork in developing countries. The 7th wave continued monitoring cultural values, attitudes and beliefs towards gender, family, and religion; attitudes and experience of poverty; education, health, and security; social tolerance and trust; attitudes towards multilateral institutions; cultural differences and similarities between regions and societies. In addition, the WVS-7 questionnaire has been elaborated with the inclusion of such new topics as the issues of justice, moral principles, corruption, accountability and risk, migration, national security and global governance.

    For more information on the history of the WVSA, visit https://www.worldvaluessurvey.org/WVSContents.jsp ›Who we are › History of the WVSA.

    Geographic coverage

    United States.

    The WVS has just completed wave 7 data that comprises 64 surveys conducted in 2017-2022. With 64 countries and societies around the world and more than 80,000 respondents, this is the latest resource made available for the research community.

    The WVS-7 survey was launched in January 2017 with Bolivia becoming the first country to conduct WVS-7. In the course of 2017 and 2018, WVS-7 has been conducted in the USA, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Ecuador, Peru, Andorra, Greece, Serbia, Romania, Turkey, Russia, Germany, Thailand, Australia, Malaysia, Indonesia, China, Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan, Nigeria, Iraq and over dozen of other world countries. Geographic coverage has also been expanded to several new countries included into the WVS for the first time, such as Bolivia, Greece, Macao SAR, Maldives, Myanmar, Nicaragua, and Tajikistan.

    Analysis unit

    Household, Individual

    Sampling procedure

    The sample type preferable for using in the World Values Survey is a full probability sample of the population aged 18 years and older. A detailed description of the sampling methodology is provided in the country specific sample design documentation available for download from WVS.

    A detailed description of the sampling methodology is provided in the United States 2017 sample design documentation available for download from WVS and also from the Downloads section of the metadata.

    Mode of data collection

    Other [oth]

    Research instrument

    The survey was fielded in the following language(s): English. The questionnaire is available for download from the WVS website.

  20. f

    Testing for the effect of reporting vs. not reporting bio profile...

    • plos.figshare.com
    xls
    Updated Nov 1, 2023
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    Cris Hughes; An-Di Yim; Chelsey Juarez; John Servello; Richard Thomas; Nicholas Passalacqua; Angela Soler (2023). Testing for the effect of reporting vs. not reporting bio profile information (sex, race, or both sex and race) on identification rate. [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0290302.t008
    Explore at:
    xlsAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 1, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    PLOS ONE
    Authors
    Cris Hughes; An-Di Yim; Chelsey Juarez; John Servello; Richard Thomas; Nicholas Passalacqua; Angela Soler
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The "n/a" status for the UNT age test is because age was estimated in all cases and thus the test could not be performed. Shaded cells indicate statistical significance of test for the adjusted p values.

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Sillitoe, P., University of Durham (2024). Garden and Demographic Surveys of the Was Valley, Southern Highlands of Papua, New Guinea, 1973-1997 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-6425-1

Garden and Demographic Surveys of the Was Valley, Southern Highlands of Papua, New Guinea, 1973-1997

Explore at:
7 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
Dataset updated
Nov 28, 2024
Dataset provided by
Department of Anthropology
Authors
Sillitoe, P., University of Durham
Time period covered
Jan 1, 1973 - Dec 1, 1997
Area covered
Papua New Guinea
Variables measured
Individuals, Subnational
Measurement technique
Face-to-face interview, Physical measurements
Description

Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.


This research project had the following five interrelated objectives:
  • to further understanding of political and economic arrangements in noncapitalist
    contexts (or more narrowly, political and economic anthropology)
  • to contribute to comparative political-economic thought by testing Western
    philosophical assumptions against acephalous arrangements
  • to advance further the investigation of a Highland New Guinea political economy (one of the most thorough inquiries into such a regime yet attempted)
  • to make an innovative contribution to ethnographic research methods and analysis using recent developments in information technology and escience
  • to explore what an alternative acephalous view of development might comprise and future opportunities to advance this through local participation
The ethnographic data produced for the project encompass land use, demography, genealogical and biographical information and other ethnography.

Further information may be found on the Was Valley Anthropological Archive web site, and on the From Production to Transaction: Challenging Political-Economic Assumptions ESRC award web page.


Main Topics:

The gardens dataset contains the following information: garden particulars (locality, age class, social status, kin group, homestead/consumption unit), land tenure details (kin group territory, relation to kin group, clearance sequence, changes between surveys, garden total area (square metres), local assessment of garden size, number), cropping details (times cultivated, garden type, cultivation status, crop occurrence, local assessment of crop variety) and site characteristics (distance (mins), enclosure, aspect (degrees), slope (degrees), slope form, altitude (metres), vegetation).

The demographic dataset contains the following information: census date, respondent gender, age, census sheet number, homestead/consumption unit, house reference numbers, kin group, relation to territorial kin group, relation to homestead holder, geographical locality name, and second house information (if relevant).

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