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Generations and Gender Survey (GGS)
Towards a Better Understanding of Relationships and Processes in the Life Course

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Article and its Citations
 

Andres Vikat
Zsolt Spéder
Gijs Beets
Francesco C. Billari
Christoph Bühler
Aline Désesquelles
Tineke Fokkema
Jan M. Hoem
Alphonse MacDonald
Gerda Neyer
Ariane Pailhé
Antonella Pinnelli
Anne Solaz

 
VOLUME 17 - ARTICLE 14
PAGES 389 - 440
Date Received: 20 Nov 2006
Date Published: 30 Nov 2007

http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol17/14/

doi:10.4054/DemRes.2007.17.14
   
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Abstract
The Generations and Gender Survey (GGS) is one of the two pillars of the Generations and Gender Programme designed to improve understanding of demographic and social development and of the factors that influence these developments. This article describes how the theoretical perspectives applied in the survey, the survey design and the questionnaire are related to this objective. The key features of the survey include panel design, multidisciplinarity, comparability, context-sensitivity, inter-generational and gender relationships. The survey applies the life course approach, focussing on the processes of childbearing, partnership dynamics, home leaving, and retiring. The selection of topics for data collection mainly follows the criterion of theoretically grounded relevance to explaining one or more of the mentioned processes. A large portion of the survey deals with economic aspects of life, such as economic activity, income, and economic well-being; a comparably large section is devoted to values and attitudes. Other domains covered by the survey include gender relationships, household composition and housing, residential mobility, social networks and private transfers, education, health, and public transfers. The third chapter of the article describes the motivations for their inclusion. The GGS questionnaire is designed for a face-to-face interview. It includes the core that each participating country needs to implement in full, and four optional sub-modules on nationality and ethnicity, on previous partners, on intentions of breaking up, and on housing, respectively. The participating countries are encouraged to include also the optional sub-modules to facilitate comparative research on these topics.

Author's affiliation
Andres Vikat
UN Economic Commission for Europe, Switzerland
Zsolt Spéder
Demographic Research Institute, Budapest, Hungary
Gijs Beets
Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute, Netherlands
Francesco C. Billari
University of Milan, Italy
Christoph Bühler
Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Germany
Aline Désesquelles
Institut national d'études démographiques, France
Tineke Fokkema
Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute, Netherlands
Jan M. Hoem
Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Germany
Alphonse MacDonald
UN Economic Commission for Europe, Switzerland
Gerda Neyer
Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Germany
Ariane Pailhé
Institut national d'études démographiques, France
Antonella Pinnelli
Università degli Studi di Roma "La Sapienza", Italy
Anne Solaz
Institut national d'études démographiques, France

Keywords
economic activity, event history, family, fertility, gender, generation, household, panel studies, survey, values

Word count (Main text)
17769

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