Family attitudes and gender opinions of cohabiting and married mothers in Switzerland
In: Family science: official journal of the European Society on Family Relations, Band 6, Heft 1, S. 370-379
ISSN: 1942-4639
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In: Family science: official journal of the European Society on Family Relations, Band 6, Heft 1, S. 370-379
ISSN: 1942-4639
In: Marriage & family review, Band 46, Heft 1-2, S. 107-125
ISSN: 1540-9635
In: Les enjeux démographiques en France et en Allemagne : réalités et conséquences, S. 109-123
In preparation of the next refreshment sample of the Swiss Household Panel (the SHP_IV, to start in 2020), the SHP ran a two-wave pilot study in 2018 and 2019 to test alternative modes of interviewing. Advances in information and communication technol-ogies and the increasing use thereof, suggest that web-based data collection offers a particularly promising alternative to telephone in the Swiss context. However, differences between CATI and web are large in terms of interviewer presence, interview pace, and the channels of communication used (oral or visual) (Couper 2011), meaning the compa-rability between the modes should be evaluated.
Also, the SHP is considering recruiting a refreshment sample in a different mode than the one used until now, which for large-scale household panel surveys has not yet been tested. It is often assumed that web mode would be inappropriate for panel recruitment purposes (Tourangeau 2017) because of its typically lower response rates, but it is un-clear whether this argument still holds in the context of a panel recruited by telephone.
To test the ways in which offering web as an alternative mode affects response rates, sample composition and measurement, the SHP mounted a two-wave pilot study, incor-porating a mixed mode experiment in 2018-2019. The aim was to compare the standard SHP CATI-based fieldwork (and recruitment) strategy with two online alternatives: a mixed mode (telephone for the HRP interview plus web for individual household mem-bers) group and a web-only group (see Voorpostel et al., in press).
Now the pilot study is completed, the data will be made available to SHP data users. These data are especially suited to answer methodological research questions related to interview mode in household panels. As the study is based on a stratified random sam-ple and uses the complete SHP questionnaires, the data can also be used for substan-tive analysis. It is important to note, however, that the weights provided with the data do not weigh for the mode of data collection and the sample of the pilot cannot be easily combined with the main samples of the SHP.
In preparation of the next refreshment sample of the Swiss Household Panel (the SHP_IV, to start in 2020), the SHP ran a two-wave pilot study in 2018 and 2019 to test alternative modes of interviewing. Advances in information and communication technol-ogies and the increasing use thereof, suggest that web-based data collection offers a particularly promising alternative to telephone in the Swiss context. However, differences between CATI and web are large in terms of interviewer presence, interview pace, and the channels of communication used (oral or visual) (Couper 2011), meaning the compa-rability between the modes should be evaluated.
Also, the SHP is considering recruiting a refreshment sample in a different mode than the one used until now, which for large-scale household panel surveys has not yet been tested. It is often assumed that web mode would be inappropriate for panel recruitment purposes (Tourangeau 2017) because of its typically lower response rates, but it is un-clear whether this argument still holds in the context of a panel recruited by telephone.
To test the ways in which offering web as an alternative mode affects response rates, sample composition and measurement, the SHP mounted a two-wave pilot study, incor-porating a mixed mode experiment in 2018-2019. The aim was to compare the standard SHP CATI-based fieldwork (and recruitment) strategy with two online alternatives: a mixed mode (telephone for the HRP interview plus web for individual household mem-bers) group and a web-only group (see Voorpostel et al., in press).
Now the pilot study is completed, the data will be made available to SHP data users. These data are especially suited to answer methodological research questions related to interview mode in household panels. As the study is based on a stratified random sam-ple and uses the complete SHP questionnaires, the data can also be used for substan-tive analysis. It is important to note, however, that the weights provided with the data do not weigh for the mode of data collection and the sample of the pilot cannot be easily combined with the main samples of the SHP.
To get more insight into how people were affected by and fared during the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic, the Swiss Household Panel launched an additional Covid-19 Survey among participating households. It was fielded between May and June 2020, right after the strictest regulations ended, but numerous restrictions were still in place. This paper presents the main findings of this study with respect to a wide variety of domains: the occurrence of Covid-19 infections in people's networks, changes with respect to work, finances, time use, family life, following education from home, health and wellbeing, worries, social networks and social cohesion, and the evaluation of the political measures taken by the federal government.
BASE
Research on the trajectories of couples shows quite consistently that the birth of the first child leads to a transformation of the family structure towards a more traditional model whose key aspect seems to be the unilateral reduction of the professional insertion of women. The more or less egalitarian beliefs of the partners hardly seem to play a role. This interdisciplinary project aims to clarify why and how this transformation is taking place. It follows, in three waves, a panel of 300 couples for a year and a half, from the 4th or 5th month of the big until the age of 1 year of the child in the canton of Vaud.
Collecting data on households and individuals since 1999, the Swiss Household Panel (SHP) is an ongoing, unique, large-scale, nationally representative, longitudinal study in Switzerland. The data of the SHP provide a rich source of information to study social change in Switzerland over a significant period on a wide variety of topics. The SHP aims to provide both continuity and innovation in measurement and data collection, with the combination of retrospective and prospective longitudinal data in the most recent refreshment sample as one notable example of such an innovation.
Collecting data on households and individuals since 1999, the Swiss Household Panel (SHP) is an ongoing, unique, large-scale, nationally representative, longitudinal study in Switzerland. The data of the SHP provide a rich source of information to study social change in Switzerland over a significant period on a wide variety of topics. The SHP aims to provide both continuity and innovation in measurement and data collection, with the combination of retrospective and prospective longitudinal data in the most recent refreshment sample as one notable example of such an innovation.
Collecting data on households and individuals since 1999, the Swiss Household Panel (SHP) is an ongoing, unique, large-scale, nationally representative, longitudinal study in Switzerland. The data of the SHP provide a rich source of information to study social change in Switzerland over a significant period on a wide variety of topics. The SHP aims to provide both continuity and innovation in measurement and data collection, with the combination of retrospective and prospective longitudinal data in the most recent refreshment sample as one notable example of such an innovation.
Collecting data on households and individuals since 1999, the Swiss Household Panel (SHP) is an ongoing, unique, large-scale, nationally representative, longitudinal study in Switzerland. The data of the SHP provide a rich source of information to study social change in Switzerland over a significant period on a wide variety of topics. The SHP aims to provide both continuity and innovation in measurement and data collection, with the combination of retrospective and prospective longitudinal data in the most recent refreshment sample as one notable example of such an innovation.
Collecting data on households and individuals since 1999, the Swiss Household Panel (SHP) is an ongoing, unique, large-scale, nationally representative, longitudinal study in Switzerland. The data of the SHP provide a rich source of information to study social change in Switzerland over a significant period on a wide variety of topics. The SHP aims to provide both continuity and innovation in measurement and data collection, with the combination of retrospective and prospective longitudinal data in the most recent refreshment sample as one notable example of such an innovation.
Collecting data on households and individuals since 1999, the Swiss Household Panel (SHP) is an ongoing, unique, large-scale, nationally representative, longitudinal study in Switzerland. The data of the SHP provide a rich source of information to study social change in Switzerland over a significant period on a wide variety of topics. The SHP aims to provide both continuity and innovation in measurement and data collection, with the combination of retrospective and prospective longitudinal data in the most recent refreshment sample as one notable example of such an innovation.
Collecting data on households and individuals since 1999, the Swiss Household Panel (SHP) is an ongoing, unique, large-scale, nationally representative, longitudinal study in Switzerland. The data of the SHP provide a rich source of information to study social change in Switzerland over a significant period on a wide variety of topics. The SHP aims to provide both continuity and innovation in measurement and data collection, with the combination of retrospective and prospective longitudinal data in the most recent refreshment sample as one notable example of such an innovation.