Design Issues in the British Household Panel Study

Problèmes d'élaboration de l'enquête par panels des foyers britanniques. L'enquête par panels des foyers britanniques (British Household Panel Study - BHPS) est le plus grand projet qui ait été financé par l'"Economic and Social Research Council" (ESRC) britannique. Basée au "Centre on Micro-social Change in Britain" de l'ESRC à l'université d'Essex, la BHPS comprendra initialement 5.000 foyers et 10.000 individus. Cet article présente l'enquête à travers des aspects clefs de son élaboration et de son étendue. Une courte discussion des avantages des données d'enquêtte par panels est complétée par la présentation de trois exemples de problématique de recherche ot des données par panels peuvent aider à comprendre le changement micro-social. La BHPS est présentée comme une approche dynamique au changement social et sa base théorique micro-social. six aspects principaux de la BHPS sont décrits: organisation et dynamique du foyer; comportement et activité par rapport au marché du travail; dynamique de revenus et de patrimoine; logement; santé; et valeurs socioéconomiques. La dernière partie concerne trois problèmes clefs des enquêtes par panels et comment la BMPS les a abordés; il s'agit de: (1) changement des populations; (2) erreurs non-liées à l'échantillonnage (la non-résponse et le conditionnement de panels); et (3) élaboration de l'échantillon. L'article se termine avec une bibitographie étendue sur la méthodologie et l'élaboration des enquêttes par panels.

[1]  A. Siegman,et al.  Proposal for a , 1959 .

[2]  L. J. Davidson,et al.  I. AN APPROACH TO THE PROBLEM , 1965 .

[3]  P. Baltes Longitudinal and cross-sectional sequences in the study of age and generation effects. , 1968, Human development.

[4]  D. Crider,et al.  TRACKING RESPONDENTS IN LONGITUDINAL SURVEYS , 1971 .

[5]  M. J. R. Healy,et al.  Longitudinal Studies and the Social Sciences. , 1971 .

[6]  E. Butler,et al.  TRACKING RESPONDENTS IN LONGITUDINAL SURVEYS: SOME PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS , 1973 .

[7]  D. Crider,et al.  Panel Studies: Some Practical Problems , 1973 .

[8]  F. Oliver The General Household Survey , 1974 .

[9]  J. Converse,et al.  Experiments in interviewing techniques: Field experiments in health reporting, 1971-1977 , 1977 .

[10]  Jerry A. Hausman,et al.  Social Experimentation, Truncated Distributions, and Efficient Estimation , 1977 .

[11]  T. Benton Philosophical foundations of the three sociologies , 1977 .

[12]  B. Clarridge,et al.  Tracing Members of a Panel: A 17-Year Follow-Up. , 1978 .

[13]  Tilo Schabert Philosophical Foundations of the Three Sociologies , 1978 .

[14]  Jerry A. Hausman,et al.  Attrition Bias in Experimental and Panel Data: The Gary Income Maintenance Experiment , 1979 .

[15]  N. Hatton ASKING QUESTIONS , 1979, The Medical journal of Australia.

[16]  John R. Nesselroade,et al.  Longitudinal Research in the Study of Behavior and Development , 1979 .

[17]  M. Traugott,et al.  Response Validity in Surveysof Voting Behavior , 1979 .

[18]  Gregory B. Markus,et al.  Analyzing panel data , 1979 .

[19]  D. Freedman,et al.  Maintaining Response Rates In Longitudinal Studies , 1980 .

[20]  Harvey Goldstein,et al.  The Recall Method in Social Surveys. , 1980 .

[21]  Mednick Sa,et al.  Handbook of Longitudinal Research , 1981 .

[22]  G. Psacharopoulos Lifetime profiles of earnings and employment: A survey , 1981 .

[23]  W. Belson,et al.  The design and understanding of survey questions , 1982 .

[24]  Peter V. Miller,et al.  Research on Interviewing Techniques , 1981 .

[25]  The Recall Method in Social Surveys. , 1981 .

[26]  Fred Phillips,et al.  Linear Panel Analysis: Models of Quantitative Change. , 1982 .

[27]  D. Freedman,et al.  Obtaining Respondent Cooperation in Family Panel Studies , 1982 .

[28]  M. J. Bane,et al.  Slipping into and Out of Poverty: the Dynamics of Spells , 1983 .

[29]  H. Berrington Decade of Dealignment , 1984 .

[30]  Paul D. Allison,et al.  Event History Analysis : Regression for Longitudinal Event Data , 1984 .

[31]  P. Allison Event History Analysis , 1984 .

[32]  F. M. Andrews Construct Validity and Error Components of Survey Measures: A Structural Modeling Approach , 1984 .

[33]  Ronald C. Kessler,et al.  Linear Panel Analysis: Models of Quantitative Change. , 1984 .

[34]  U. Hanefeld,et al.  The German socio-economic panel , 1984 .

[35]  McMillen Db,et al.  Towards a longitudinal definition of households. , 1984 .

[36]  M. Hannan,et al.  Social Dynamics: Models and Methods. , 1986 .

[37]  L. Chambless,et al.  Maximum likelihood methods for complex sample data: logistic regression and discrete proportional hazards models , 1985 .

[38]  J. Creedy Dynamics of income distribution , 1987 .

[39]  Jeffrey K. Liker,et al.  Panel Data and Models of Change: A Comparison of First Difference and Conventional Two-Wave Models , 1985 .

[40]  Joseph G. Altonji,et al.  Do Wages Rise with Job Seniority? , 1985 .

[41]  Cheng Hsiao,et al.  Benefits and limitations of panel data , 1985 .

[42]  G. Duncan,et al.  Years of Poverty, Years of Plenty , 1985 .

[43]  Angus Deaton Panel data from time series of cross-sections , 1985 .

[44]  N. Mathiowetz,et al.  A validation study of economic survey data , 1985 .

[45]  J. Nesselroade,et al.  Individual Development and Social Change: Explanatory Analysis , 1985 .

[46]  J. Nesselroade,et al.  7 – Age, Period, and Cohort Analysis and the Study of Individual Development and Social Change , 1985 .

[47]  James J. Heckman,et al.  Longitudinal Analysis of Labor Market Data , 1985 .

[48]  A. Gamble,et al.  British Social Attitudes: the 1985 Report , 1986 .

[49]  Ian Plewis,et al.  Analysing Change—Measurement and Explanation Using Longitudinal Data , 1986 .

[50]  J. Reuter,et al.  Individual Development and Social Change: Explanatory Analysis , 1986 .

[51]  Cheng Hsiao,et al.  Analysis of Panel Data , 1987 .

[52]  J. Morgan,et al.  The Role of Panel Studies in a World of Scarce Research Resources , 1986 .

[53]  G. Elder Life course dynamics : trajectories and transitions, 1968-1980 , 1987 .

[54]  G. Patterson,et al.  An approach to the problem of recruitment and retention rates for longitudinal research. , 1987 .

[55]  Greg J. Duncan,et al.  The role of panel studies in research on economic behavior , 1987 .

[56]  R. Jowell British social attitudes the 1987 report , 1987 .

[57]  Norbert Schwarz,et al.  Response Effects in Surveys , 1987 .

[58]  Greg J. Duncan,et al.  Issues of design and analysis of surveys across time , 1987 .

[59]  P. Wilson,et al.  An Evaluation of the Postcode Address File as a Sampling Frame and its Use Within Opcs , 1987 .

[60]  L. Rips,et al.  Answering autobiographical questions: the impact of memory and inference on surveys. , 1987, Science.

[61]  G. Duncan,et al.  Single-parent families: are their economic problems transitory or persistent? , 1987, Family planning perspectives.

[62]  H. Elizabeth Peters,et al.  Retrospective Versus Panel Data in Analyzing Lifecycle Events , 1988 .

[63]  N. Tuma,et al.  Applications of event history analysis in life course research , 1988 .

[64]  Sean Becketti,et al.  The Panel Study of Income Dynamics after Fourteen Years: An Evaluation , 1988, Journal of Labor Economics.

[65]  D. Alwin,et al.  The life history calendar: a technique for collecting retrospective data. , 1988, Sociological methodology.

[66]  G. Duncan,et al.  Longitudinal Aspects of Childhood Poverty , 1988 .

[67]  Richard B. Davies,et al.  Inference from Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Data for Dynamic Behavioural Processes , 1989 .

[68]  Gordon Marshall Social Class in Modern Britain , 1989 .

[69]  K. Mayer,et al.  Age, period, and cohort in the study of the life course: A comparison of classical A-P-C-analysis with event history analysis or farewell to Lexis? , 1990 .

[70]  Eric R. Ziegel,et al.  Survey Errors and Survey Costs , 1990 .

[71]  David P. Farrington,et al.  Minimising attrition in longitudinal research: methods in tracing and securing cooperation in a 24-year follow-up study , 1990 .

[72]  L. Lillard Sample Dynamics: Some Behavioral Issues , 1990 .

[73]  G. C. Kemp The use of panel data in econometric analysis: A survey , 1991 .

[74]  Jacques A. Hagenaars,et al.  Categorical Longitudinal Data. , 1991 .

[75]  Chris J. Skinner,et al.  Analysis of complex surveys , 1991 .

[76]  J. F. Bell,et al.  Data Quality on Longitudinal Research , 1992 .