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Content related inconsistencies between number of people living in household and related variables like "living with partner" (v236=1), living with parents/parents in law (v238=2,3,4) and number of own children in household (v239a) might be an indicator of different understanding of household.
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czechia, Denmark, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Great Britain, Iceland, Lithuania, Montenegro, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Serbia, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland: Content related inconsistencies: In n=847 cases the number of children living in household exceeds the overall number of people living in household.
In some countries respondents (total n=561) stated to live with their partner (v236=1) and still live alone (v240=1). These are not necessarily inconsistent answers, as some people live together but at separate addresses (LAP=living apart together).
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Iceland, Lithuania, Montenegro, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland: Content related inconsistencies: In some cases the respondent stated to live with parents/parents in law/both and even though answered to be living alone (or 2 pers. In HH but living with both, parents and parents in law) (total n=164).
Montenegro: 1 respondent report a number of people living in household, which significantly exceeds the expected number after answers to other variables: v236 (partner), v238(parents (in law)), v239a (children). 1 respondent reports a high number of children living outside household (v239b) and not inside household (v239a), whereby the reported number does fit to the number of people living inside household (v240).
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Content related inconsistencies between number of people living in household and related variables like "living with partner" (v236=1), living with parents/parents in law (v238=2,3,4) and number of own children in household (v239a) might be an indicator of different understanding of household.
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czechia, Denmark, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Great Britain, Iceland, Lithuania, Montenegro, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Serbia, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland: Content related inconsistencies: In n=847 cases the number of children living in household exceeds the overall number of people living in household.
In some countries respondents (total n=561) stated to live with their partner (v236=1) and still live alone (v240=1). These are not necessarily inconsistent answers, as some people live together but at separate addresses (LAP=living apart together).
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Iceland, Lithuania, Montenegro, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland: Content related inconsistencies: In some cases the respondent stated to live with parents/parents in law/both and even though answered to be living alone (or 2 pers. In HH but living with both, parents and parents in law) (total n=164).
Montenegro: 1 respondent report a number of people living in household, which significantly exceeds the expected number after answers to other variables: v236 (partner), v238(parents (in law)), v239a (children). 1 respondent reports a high number of children living outside household (v239b) and not inside household (v239a), whereby the reported number does fit to the number of people living inside household (v240).
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Note:
For data protection reasons, respondents with 6 people or more living in household have been recoded to 6 '6 and more'.
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?:groupDescription
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Die European Values Study ist eine transnationale empirische Langzeitstudie, die in Verantwortung der European Values Study Foundation durchgeführt wird. Die einzelnen Erhebungen decken ein breites Spektrum an Themen ab, die sich auf zentrale Lebensbereiche wie Arbeit und Freizeit, Familie und Sexualität, Religion, Politik und Ethik erstrecken.
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Die European Values Study ist eine transnationale empirische Langzeitstudie, die in Verantwortung der European Values Study Fundation seit 1981 in einem 9-jährigen Turnus durchgeführt wird. Die wiederholte Querschnittserhebungen decken ein breites Spektrum an Themen ab, die sich auf zentrale Lebensbereiche wie Arbeit und Freizeit, Familie und Sexualität, Religion, Politik und Ethik erstrecken. Der EVS-Datenbestand umfasst die integrierten Datensätze für die einzelnen Wellen und zusätzlich für die Wellen 1999 und 2008 die nationalen Datensätze. Frage, die mindestens zweimal in EVS, oder in EVS und WVS wiederholt wurden, werden in das EVS Trend File kumuliert. Das Trend File des EVS kann mit dem Trend File des World Values Surveys (WVS) zu dem Integrated Values Surveys Data File zusammengefügt werden.
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The European Values Study is a large-scale, cross-national and longitudinal survey research program conducted under the responsibility of the European Values Study Foundation since 1981. The cross-sectional surveys, repeated in a 9-year cycle, cover a broad range of topics on central areas of life such as work and leisure time, family and sexuality, religion, politics and ethics. The EVS holding includes integrated datasets on every EVS wave and, in addition, the national datasets for the 1999 and 2008 waves. Questions repeated at least twice in EVS, or EVS and WVS, are cumulated in the EVS Trend File. The EVS Trend File can easily be merged with the World Values Survey (WVS) Trend File into the Integrated Values Surveys Data File.
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The European Values Study is a transnational empirical long-term study conducted under the responsibility of the European Values Study Foundation. The individual surveys cover a wide range of topics that span central areas of life such as work and leisure, family and sexuality, religion, politics and ethics.
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