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Election Study Notes on Module 3 (ZA5181)
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FOR COUNTRY SPECIFIC INFORMATION
see Election Study Notes
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POLITY NAME (ELEC YEAR) | | AUSTRALIA (2007) | 44 | CZECH REPUBLIC (2006) | 48 | CZECH REPUBLIC (2010) | 58 | GERMANY (2005) | 221 | HONG KONG (2008) | 273 | IRELAND (2007) | 72 | NETHERLANDS (2006) | 50 | NEW ZEALAND (2008) | 35 | POLAND (2005) | 138 | POLAND (2007) | 119 | ROMANIA (2009) | 9 | SLOVENIA (2008) | 30 | SPAIN (2008) | 227 | THAILAND (2007) | 79 |
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NOTES: C2015
Data are not available for AUSTRIA (2008), BRAZIL (2006), CANADA (2008), CHILE (2009), DENMARK (2007), FINLAND (2007), FINLAND (2011), ICELAND (2007), ICELAND (2009), NETHERLANDS (2010), PERU (2011), SLOVAKIA (2010), SOUTH AFRICA (2009), SWEDEN (2006). Note that there is some inconsistency among studies in the way responses to the questions about current employment status of spouses (C2015) were administered, affecting the application of the follow-up occupation variables (C2016-C2019). The CSES standard is that the occupation variables are asked for those in the labor force. However, in some cases, for spouses categorized as not in the labor force in C2015 (codes 6-12), the occupation variables may report their previous or last occupation. There is variation in the manner in which the questions about respondent's spouse were administered in different election studies. In some cases only those categorized as "married or living together" in C2004 were asked the spouse questions, while in some surveys other responses could also lead to a respondent being asked these questions. Consequently C2015 sometimes includes information of spouses from respondents who reported neither being married nor living together with a partner (C2004 is not code 1.). These data remained unchanged. For further details and explanations see Election Study Notes on C2004.
Table: Frequencies on C2015 for respondents without partner or spouse living in their household
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NOTES: C2015
Data are not available for AUSTRIA (2008), BRAZIL (2006), CANADA (2008), CHILE (2009), DENMARK (2007), FINLAND (2007), FINLAND (2011), ICELAND (2007), ICELAND (2009), NETHERLANDS (2010), PERU (2011), SLOVAKIA (2010), SOUTH AFRICA (2009), SWEDEN (2006). Note that there is some inconsistency among studies in the way responses to the questions about current employment status of spouses (C2015) were administered, affecting the application of the follow-up occupation variables (C2016-C2019). The CSES standard is that the occupation variables are asked for those in the labor force. However, in some cases, for spouses categorized as not in the labor force in C2015 (codes 6-12), the occupation variables may report their previous or last occupation. There is variation in the manner in which the questions about respondent's spouse were administered in different election studies. In some cases only those categorized as "married or living together" in C2004 were asked the spouse questions, while in some surveys other responses could also lead to a respondent being asked these questions. Consequently C2015 sometimes includes information of spouses from respondents who reported neither being married nor living together with a partner (C2004 is not code 1.). These data remained unchanged. For further details and explanations see Election Study Notes on C2004.
Table: Frequencies on C2015 for respondents without partner or spouse living in their household
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?:groupDescription
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CSES is a collaborative program of research among election study teams from around the world. The research program as well as the questionnaire and the study design are developed by an international committee of leading social researchers. Participating countries include a common module of survey questions in their post-election studies. The data contain information on individual choice behavior, demographics, the constituencies, the national election results and the political systems. The studies are then merged into a single, free, public dataset for use in comparative study and cross-level analysis.
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Die CSES ist eine weltweite Kooperation von Wahlforschern. Das Forschungsprogramm, der Fragebogen und das Studiendesign werden durch ein internationales Planungskomitee führender Sozialforscher erstellt. Teilnehmende Länder implementieren einen einheitlichen Fragenkomplex in ihre Nachwahlstudien. Die erhoben Daten umfassen das individuelle Wahlverhalten, politische Einstellungen und sozio-demographische Merkmale sowie Angaben zu den Wahlbezirken, den nationalen Wahlergebnissen und dem nationalen politischen System. Die einzelnen Länderstudien werden in einen gemeinsamen Datensatz integriert und stehen der Wissenschaft für vergleichende und länderübergreifende Untersuchungen frei zur Verfügung.
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