International Social Survey Programme: Social Inequality IV - ISSP 2009

  • The Traffic Reseach Group (Creator)
  • Jorge Raúl Jorrat (Contributor)
  • J. A. Evans (Contributor)
  • Michael Haller (Contributor)
  • Markus Hadler (Contributor)
  • Carolina Segovia (Contributor)
  • Yanjie Bian (Contributor)
  • L. Li (Contributor)
  • Bambos Papageorgiou (Contributor)
  • Natalie Simonová (Contributor)
  • Petr Mateju (Contributor)
  • Sanne Lund Clement (Contributor)
  • Jørgen Goul Andersen (Contributor)
  • Gitte S. Harrits (Aarhus University Hospital) (Contributor)
  • Peter Gundelach (Contributor)
  • Ulrik Kjær (Contributor)
  • Peter Lüchau (Contributor)
  • Torben Fridberg (Contributor)
  • Mads Jæger (University of Southern Denmark) (Contributor)
  • Jelena Helemäe (Contributor)
  • Kadri Täht (Contributor)
  • Marii Pashkov (Contributor)
  • Ann Carton (Contributor)
  • Renske E Blom (Contributor)
  • Harri Melin (Contributor)
  • Michel Forsé (Contributor)
  • Yannick Lemel (Contributor)
  • Christof Wolf (Contributor)
  • A. La Park (Contributor)
  • Peter Robert (Contributor)
  • S Olafsdottir (Contributor)
  • Jón G. Bernburg (Contributor)
  • Paul N. Epstein (Contributor)
  • Cinzia Meraviglia (Contributor)
  • M. Hara (Contributor)
  • Kumiko Nishi (Contributor)
  • Hiroshi Aramaki (Contributor)
  • Aivars Tabuns (Contributor)
  • Ilze Koroleva (Contributor)
  • Algis Krupavičius (Contributor)
  • Philip Gendall (Contributor)
  • Knut K. Skjak (Contributor)
  • Kirstine Kolsrud (Contributor)
  • Anne Mortensen (Contributor)
  • Bogdan Cichomski (Contributor)
  • Jorge Vala (Contributor)
  • Ludmilla Khakhulina (Contributor)
  • Alice Ramos (Contributor)
  • Morten Fink (Contributor)
  • Brina Malnar (Contributor)
  • Niko Tos (Contributor)
  • Jare Struwig (Contributor)
  • Sang Wook Kim (Contributor)
  • Jennifer Nicholas (Contributor)
  • Jonas Edlund (Contributor)
  • Stefan Svallfors (Contributor)
  • Dominique Joye (Contributor)
  • Y.-C. Chang (Contributor)
  • Ersin Kalaycıoğlu (Contributor)
  • Ali Carkoglu (Contributor)
  • Volodimir Paniotto (Contributor)
  • S. Makejev (Contributor)
  • Tom Smith (Contributor)
  • Peter V. Marsden (Contributor)
  • Michael Hout (Contributor)
  • Gloria R. Leon (Contributor)
  • O. Avila-Pozas (Contributor)
  • Alaberto Camardiel (Contributor)
  • Northern Ireland: Interviewing Was Carried Out By Social Survey Interviewers Employed By The Central Survey Unit Of The Northern Ireland Statistics And Research Agency (Contributor)
  • Zagreb GfK Market Research (Contributor)
  • Quezon City Social Weather Stations (Contributor)
  • Bulgaria: Institute Of Sociology At The Bulgarian Academy Of Sciences (Contributor)
  • Argentina: Cualitativo Y Cuantitativo (Contributor)
  • Black Rock Australia: Academic Surveys Australia (Contributor)
  • Vienna Institute For Empirical Social Research (IFES) (Contributor)
  • Moscow Bashkirova And Partners (Contributor)
  • Santiago Chile: ICCOM (Contributor)
  • C. Brown (Contributor)
  • Zagreb GfK Market Research (Contributor)
  • Cyprus College Cyprus: Center Of Applied Research (Contributor)
  • SC&C Czech Republic (Contributor)
  • Copenhagen Denmark: SFI SURVEY (Contributor)
  • Turu-Uuringute AS Estonia: (Contributor)
  • Brussels Belgium: TNS-Dimarso (Contributor)
  • Social Survey Unit Finland: Statistics Finland (Contributor)
  • Laboratoire De Sociologie Quantitative) France: FRANCE-ISSP (Centre De Recherche En Economie Et Statistique (Contributor)
  • Munich And Infratest Burke Infratest (Contributor)
  • London NatCen Social Research (Contributor)
  • Budapest TÁRKI Social Research Institute (Contributor)
  • Israel: Mahshov Survey Research Institute (Contributor)
  • Israel Cohen (Contributor)
  • Foster Mallory L (Contributor)
  • Tokyo Central Research Services (Contributor)
  • University Of Latvia Latvia: Institute Of Philosophy And Sociology (Contributor)
  • Vilnius Lithuania: RAIT (Contributor)
  • Journalism And Marketing New Zealand: Department Of Communication (Contributor)
  • Oslo Norway: Statistics Norway (Contributor)
  • Quezon City Social Weather Stations (Contributor)
  • Warsaw Public Opinion Research Center (CBOS) (Contributor)
  • Paulo Lisboa (Contributor)
  • Social Monitoring Center (Contributor)
  • Bratislava Slovakia: FOCUS (Contributor)
  • University Of Ljubljana Public Opinion And Mass Communication Research Centre (CJMMK) (Contributor)
  • Pretoria Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) (Contributor)
  • The Centre Of Political And Sociological Researches Of Belarus State University (Contributor)
  • Madrid Spain: Data SA (Contributor)
  • Stockholm Sweden: SIFO Research And Consulting (Contributor)
  • Lausanne Switzerland: MIS Trend (Contributor)
  • Ukraine: Social Monitoring Centre (NGO) And Ukrainian Institute For Social Research (Contributor)
  • Istanbul Infakto Research Workshop (Contributor)
  • Kiev Kiev International Institute Of Sociology (Contributor)
  • Chicago National Opinion Research Center (NORC) (Contributor)
  • Caracas Instituto Delphos (Contributor)

Dataset

Description

Social inequality. Themes: Importance of social background, merit, discrimination,corruption and good relations as prerequisites for success in society(wealthy family, well-educated parents, good education, ambitions, hardworking, knowing the right people, political connections, givingbribes, person´s race and religion, gender); attitude towards equalityof educational opportunity in one´s country (corruption as criteria forsocial mobility, only students from the best secondary schools have agood chance to obtain a university education, only rich people canafford the costs of attending university, same chances for everyone toenter university, regardless of gender, ethnicity or socialbackground); opinion about own salary: actual occupational earning isadequate; estimation of actual and reasonable earnings for occupationalgroups: doctor, chairman of a large national corporation, shopassistant, unskilled worker in a factory, cabinet minister in thenational government; income differences are too large in therespondent´s country; responsibility of government to reduce incomedifferences; government should provide a decent standard of living forthe unemployed and spend less on benefits for poor people; demand forhigher taxes for people with high incomes; opinion on taxes for peoplewith high income; justification of better medical supply and bettereducation for people with higher income; perception of class conflictsbetween social groups in the country (poor and rich people, workingclass and middle class, management and workers, people at the top ofsociety and people at the bottom); self-assessment and assessment ofthe family the respondent grew up in on a top-bottom-scale; socialposition compared to father (social mobility); salary criteria (scale:responsibility, education, needed support for family and children,quality of job performance or hard work at the job); feeling of a justpayment; characterisation of the actual and the desired social systemof the country, measured by classification on pyramid diagrams (imageof society). Demography: sex; age; marital status; steady life partner; years ofschooling; highest education level; country specific education anddegree; current employment status (respondent and partner); hoursworked weekly; occupation (ISCO 1988) (respondent and partner);supervising function at work; working for private or public sector orself-employed (respondent and partner); if self-employed: number ofemployees; trade union membership; earnings of respondent (countryspecific); family income (country specific); size of household;household composition; party affiliation (left-right); country specificparty affiliation; participation in last election; religiousdenomination; religious main groups; attendance of religious services;self-placement on a top-bottom scale; region (country specific); sizeof community (country specific); type of community: urban-rural area;country of origin or ethnic group affiliation; occupation status andprofession of respondent´s father and mother during the youth of therespondent (ISCO 88); number of books in the parental home during theyouth of the respondent (cultural resources); occupational status andprofession in the first job and the current job (ISCO 88 and workingtype); self-assessment of the social class; estimated amount of familywealth (monetary value of assets); work orientation:self-characterisation at this time and in the youth of the respondentconcerning his performance at work respectively at school. Additionally coded: administrative mode of data-collection; weightingfactor; case substitution.
Date made available23 May 2017
PublisherGESIS Data Archive
Date of data production8 Feb 2008 - 16 Jan 2012
Geographical coveragePhilippines

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