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Covers the latest methodologies and research on international comparative surveys with contributions from noted experts in the field
Advances in Comparative Survey Methodology examines the most recent advances in methodology and operations as well as the technical developments in international survey research. With contributions from a panel of international experts, the text includes information on the use of Big Data in concert with survey data, collecting biomarkers, the human subject regulatory environment, innovations in data collection methodology and sampling techniques, use of paradata across the survey lifecycle, metadata standards for dissemination, and new analytical techniques.
This important resource:
Written for students and academic survey researchers and market researchers engaged in comparative projects, this text represents a unique collaboration that features the latest methodologies and research on global comparative surveys.
Timothy P. Johnson, PhD, Director of the Survey Research Laboratory and Professor of Public Administration, University of Illinois at Chicago.
Beth-Ellen Pennell, Director of International Survey Operations at the Survey Research Center, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan.
Ineke A. L. Stoop, PhD, Head Methodology Department at The Netherlands Institute for Social Research|SCP and member of the Core Scientific Team of the European Social Survey.
Brita Dorer, researcher at GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences in Mannheim, Germany and head of the translation team of the European Social Survey (ESS).
Preface xix
Notes on Contributors xxiii
Section I Introduction 1
1 The Promise and Challenge of 3MC Research 3Timothy P. Johnson, Beth‐Ellen Pennell, Ineke A.L. Stoop, and Brita Dorer
2 Improving Multinational, Multiregional, and Multicultural (3MC) Comparability Using the Total Survey Error (TSE) Paradigm 13Tom W. Smith
3 Addressing Equivalence and Bias in Cross‐cultural Survey Research Within a Mixed Methods Framework 45Jose‐Luis Padilla, Isabel Benitez, and Fons J.R. van de Vijver
Section II Sampling Approaches 65
4 Innovative Sample Designs Using GIS Technology 67Stephanie Eckman, Kristen Himelein, and Jill A. Dever
5 Within‐household Selection of Respondents 93Achim Koch
Section III Cross‐cultural Questionnaire Design and Testing 113
6 Overview of Questionnaire Design and Testing 115Julie A.J. de Jong, Brita Dorer, Sunghee Lee, Ting Yan, and Ana Villar
7 Sensitive Questions in Comparative Surveys 139Anna V. Andreenkova and Debra Javeline
8 Implementing a Multinational Study of Questionnaire Design 161Henning Silber, Tobias H. Stark, Annelies G. Blom, and Jon A. Krosnick
9 Using Anchoring Vignettes to Correct for Differential Response Scale Usage in 3MC Surveys 181Mengyao Hu, Sunghee Lee, and Hongwei Xu
10 Conducting Cognitive Interviewing Studies to Examine Survey Question Comparability 203Kristen Miller
11 Setting Up the Cognitive Interview Task for Non‐English‐speaking Participants in the United States 227Hyunjoo Park and Patricia L. Goerman
12 Working Toward Comparable Meaning of Different Language Versions of Survey Instruments: Do Monolingual and Bilingual Cognitive Testing Respondents Help to Uncover the Same Issues? 251Patricia L. Goerman, Mikelyn Meyers, Mandy Sha, Hyunjoo Park, and Alisu Schoua‐Glusberg
13 Examining the Comparability of Behavior Coding Across Cultures 271Timothy P. Johnson, Allyson Holbrook, Young Ik Cho, Sharon Shavitt,Noel Chavez, and Saul Weiner
Section IV Languages, Translation, and Adaptation 293
14 How to Choose Interview Language in Different Countries 295Anna V. Andreenkova
15 Can the Language of Survey Administration Influence Respondents’ Answers? 325Emilia Peytcheva
16 Documenting the Survey Translation and Monitoring Process 341Dorothée Behr, Steve Dept, and Elica Krajčeva
17 Preventing Differences in Translated Survey Items Using the Survey Quality Predictor 357Diana Zavala‐Rojas, Willem E. Saris, and Irmtraud N. Gallhofer
Section V Mixed Mode and Mixed Methods 385
18 The Design and Implementation of Mixed‐mode Surveys 387Edith D. de Leeuw, Z. Tuba Suzer‐Gurtekin, and Joop J. Hox
19 Mixed‐mode Surveys: Design, Estimation, and Adjustment Methods 409Z. Tuba Suzer‐Gurtekin, Richard Valliant, Steven G. Heeringa,and Edith D. de Leeuw
20 Mixed Methods in a Comparative Context: Technology and New Opportunities for Social Science Research 431Nathalie E. Williams and Dirgha J. Ghimire
Section VI Response Styles 455
21 Cross‐cultural Comparability of Response Patterns of Subjective Probability Questions 457Sunghee Lee, Florian Keusch, Norbert Schwarz, Mingnan Liu, and Z. Tuba Suzer‐Gurtekin
22 Response Styles in Cross‐cultural Surveys 477Mingnan Liu, Z. Tuba Suzer‐Gurtekin, Florian Keusch, and Sunghee Lee
23 Examining Translation and Respondents’ Use of Response Scales in 3MC Surveys 501Ting Yan and Mengyao Hu
Section VII Data Collection Challenges and Approaches 519
24 Data Collection in Cross‐national and International Surveys:Regional Case Studies 521Kristen Cibelli Hibben, Beth‐Ellen Pennell, Sarah M. Hughes,Yu‐chieh (Jay) Lin, and Jennifer Kelley
25 Survey Data Collection in Sub‐Saharan Africa (SSA): Challenges, Strategies, and Opportunities 533Sarah M. Hughes and Yu‐chieh (Jay) Lin
26 Survey Challenges and Strategies in the Middle East and Arab Gulf Regions 555Justin Gengler, Kien Trung Le, and David Howell
27 Data Collection in Cross‐national and International Surveys: Latin America and the Caribbean 569J. Daniel Montalvo, Mitchell A. Seligson, and Elizabeth J. Zechmeister
28 Survey Research in India and China 583Charles Q. Lau, Ellen Marks, and Ashish Kumar Gupta
29 Best Practices for Panel Maintenance and Retention 597Nicole Watson, Eva Leissou, Heidi Guyer, and Mark Wooden
30 Collection of Biomeasures in a Cross‐national Setting: Experiences in SHARE 623Luzia M. Weiss, Joseph W. Sakshaug, and Axel Borsch‐Supan
31 Multinational Event History Calendar Interviewing 643Yfke P. Ongena, Marieke Haan, and Wil Dijkstra
32 Ethical Considerations in the Total Survey Error Context 665Julie A.J. de Jong
33 Linking Auxiliary Data to Survey Data: Ethical and Legal Challenges in Europe and the United States 683Kirstine Kolsrud, Linn‐Merethe Rød, and Katrine U. Segadal
Section VIII Quality Control and Monitoring 705
34 Organizing and Managing Comparative Surveys 707Lesli Scott, Peter Ph. Mohler, and Kristen Cibelli Hibben
35 Case Studies on Monitoring Interviewer Behavior in International and Multinational Surveys 731Zeina Mneimneh, Lars Lyberg, Sharan Sharma, Mahesh Vyas,Dhananjay Bal Sathe, Frederic Malter, and Yasmin Altwaijri
36 New Frontiers in Detecting Data Fabrication 771Michael Robbins
Section IX Nonresponse 807
37 Comparing Nonresponse and Nonresponse Biases in Multinational,Multiregional, and Multicultural Contexts 809James Wagner and Ineke A.L. Stoop
38 Geographic Correlates of Nonresponse in California: A Cultural Ecosystems Perspective 835Matt Jans, Kevin McLaughlin, Joseph Viana, David Grant, Royce Park and Ninez A. Ponce
39 Additional Languages and Representativeness 859Oliver Lipps and Michael Ochsner
Section X Multi‐group Analysis 879
40 Measurement Invariance in International Large‐scale Assessments:Integrating Theory and Method 881Deana Desa, Fons J.R. van de Vijver, Ralph Carstens and Wolfram Schulz
41 Approximate Measurement Invariance 911Kimberley Lek, Daniel Oberski, Eldad Davidov, Jan Cieciuch, Daniel Seddig, and Peter Schmidt
42 Data Harmonization, Data Documentation, and Dissemination 933Peter Granda
43 Basic Principles of Survey Data Recycling 937Kazimierz M. Slomczynski and Irina Tomescu‐Dubrow
44 Survey Data Harmonization and the Quality of Data Documentation in Cross‐national Surveys 963Marta Kołczyńska and Matthew Schoene
45 Identification of Processing Errors in Cross‐national Surveys 985Olena Oleksiyenko, Ilona Wysmulek, and Anastas Vangeli
46 Item Metadata as Controls for Ex Post Harmonization of International Survey Projects 1011Marta Kołczyńska and Kazimierz M. Slomczynski
47 The Past, Present, and Future of Statistical Weights in International Survey Projects: Implications for Survey Data Harmonization 1035Marcin W. Zieliński, Przemek Powałko, and Marta Kołczyńska
Section XII Looking Forward 1053
48 Prevailing Issues and the Future of Comparative Surveys 1055Lars Lyberg, Lilli Japec, and Can Tongur
Wiley Series In Survey Methodology 1083
Index 1087
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