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1
Translate Wisely! An Evaluation of Close and Adaptive Translation Procedures in an Experiment Involving Questionnaire Translation
In: International journal of sociology ; 51 ; 2 ; 135-162 (2022)
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2
Generating Samples of Diasporic Minority Popula­tions: A Chilean Example
In: Target­ing Inter­national Audiences: Current and Future Approaches to Inter­national Broad­casting Research ; 3 ; CIBAR Proceedings ; 138-149 ; Conference of International Broadcasters' Audience Research Services (CIBAR) ; XX (2022)
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3
The Optimism-Pessimism Short Scale-2 (SOP2): a comprehensive validation of the English-language adaptation
In: Measurement Instruments for the Social Sciences ; 4 ; 1-14 (2022)
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4
Warum wir so wenig über die Sprachen in Deutschland wissen: Spracheinstellungen als Erkenntnisbarriere
In: Diskurs Kindheits- und Jugendforschung / Discourse. Journal of Childhood and Adolescence Research ; 16 ; 4 ; 403-419 ; Perspektiven von Kindern und Jugendlichen auf sprachliche Diversität und Sprachbildungsprozesse (2021)
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5
Afterword: Future Directions in Multinational, Multiregional, and Multicultural (3MC) Survey Research
In: The essential role of language in survey research ; 243-256 (2021)
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6
Mapping the linguistic landscapes of the Marshall Islands
In: Journal of Linguistic Geography ; 5 ; 2 ; 67-85 (2021)
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7
Multi-mode question pretesting: Using traditional cognitive interviews and online testing as complementary methods
In: Survey Methods: Insights from the Field ; 1-14 ; Advancements in Online and Mobile Survey Methods (2021)
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8
Discourse Networks and Dual Screening: Analyzing Roles, Content and Motivations in Political Twitter Conversations
In: Politics and Governance ; 8 ; 2 ; 311-325 ; Policy Debates and Discourse Network Analysis (2021)
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9
Integrating Manual and Automatic Annotation for the Creation of Discourse Network Data Sets
In: Politics and Governance ; 8 ; 2 ; 326-339 ; Policy Debates and Discourse Network Analysis (2021)
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10
The Quality of Big Data: Development, Problems, and Possibilities of Use of Process-Generated Data in the Digital Age
In: Historical Social Research ; 45 ; 3 ; 209-243 (2020)
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11
Sprachlich-kulturelle Herausforderungen bei der qualitativen Inhaltsanalyse musikbiografischer Interviews mit chinesischen und schweizerischen Musikstudierenden
In: Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research ; 20 ; 3 ; 12 ; Qualitative Content Analysis I (2019)
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12
Building a Sampling Frame for Migrant Populations via an Onomastic Approach: Lesson learned from the Austrian Immigrant Survey 2016
In: Survey Methods: Insights from the Field ; 1-20 ; Probability and Nonprobability Sampling: Sampling of hard-to-reach survey populations (2019)
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13
Exploring Language Effects in Crosscultural Survey Research: Does the Language of Administration Affect Answers About Politics?
In: Methods, data, analyses : a journal for quantitative methods and survey methodology (mda) ; 12 ; 1 ; 127-150 (2018)
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14
Name-Based Measures of Neighborhood Composition: How Telling Are Neighbors' Names
In: Survey Research Methods ; 11 ; 4 ; 435-450 (2018)
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15
Language Barriers during the Fieldwork of the IAB-BAMF-SOEP Survey of Refugees in Germany
In: Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues ; 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 75-84 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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16
Mining Social Science Publications for Survey Variables
In: Proceedings of the Second Workshop on NLP and Computational Social Science ; 47-52 (2018)
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17
Linguistic and Cultural Aspects in Migrant Surveys: Introduction and Overview
In: Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues ; 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 5-12 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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18
Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues
In: 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 108 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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19
The Place of Expert Review in Translation and Questionnaire Evaluation for Hard-to-Count Populations in National Surveys
In: Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues ; 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 29-41 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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20
Surveying Migrants in the Context of the Lowincome Panel PASS
In: Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues ; 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 85-94 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
Abstract: The panel study ^"Labor Market and Social Security" (PASS), established by the Institute for Employment Research, is a central data source for research on unemployment, poverty, and the welfare state in Germany. Since 2007, approximately 12,000 persons in more than 8,000 households have been interviewed annually. The study's design particularly allows for evaluating the situation of recipients of basic income support, called unemployment benefits II (UB II) in Germany. With the influx of refugees to Germany, the structure of UB II recipients changed and as a consequence Arabic-speaking persons needed to be integrated into PASS. In 2016, that is, in PASS wave 10, we were faced with several challenges to meet the needs of this new population. This paper focuses on fieldwork issues: How did we access the special population of Arabic-speaking respondents and which contact strategies were necessary to reach refugees? And how did we manage to conduct the interviews given the respondents’ different cultural backgrounds and their special living conditions as refugees in Germany? The sampling structure of PASS allows for comparing the refugee sample and the general UB II recipients. A great willingness to participate and high motivation was apparent among the refugees. It was possible to obtain access to the refugee households both by telephone and face-to-face. Whereas non-response occurred to a larger extent in the general refresher sample due to refusals, in the refugee sample it was caused by lower reachability.
Keyword: anthropology; Antwortverhalten; Arbeitslosengeld II; Arbeitslosigkeit; Armut; Bundesrepublik Deutschland; Computer Methods; data capture; Datengewinnung; Erhebungstechniken und Analysetechniken der Sozialwissenschaften; Federal Republic of Germany; Flüchtling; Fragebogen; Interview; Leistungsbezug; low income; Methods and Techniques of Data Collection and Data Analysis; Migrant; Niedrigeinkommen; poverty; questionnaire; receipt of benefits; refugee; response behavior; Social sciences; sociology; Sozialwissenschaften; Soziologie; Statistical Methods; unemployment
URL: http://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-58149-4
https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/58149
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