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ALLBUS 1994 (ZA No. 2400)
Data Collection Period:
- February 1994 to May 1994
Scientific Council:
- Klaus Allerbeck, University of Frankfurt;
- Jutta Allmendinger, University of Munich;
- Walter Müller, University of Mannheim;
- Karl Dieter Opp, University of Leipzig;
- Franz Urban Pappi, University of Mannheim;
- Erwin K. Scheuch, University of Cologne;
- Rolf Ziegler, University of Munich
Data Collector:
- Infratest Burke (Munich) and Infratest Burke (Berlin)
Contents:
Social monitoring of trends in attitudes, behavior, and societal change
in the Federal Republic of Germany. The main topics in 1994 are:
- Economic situations and occupational life
- Social inequality and the welfare state
- Attitudes towards and contacts with foreigners
living in Germany
- Political attitudes
- Attitudes relating to the process of German
re-unification
- ALLBUS-Demography
- Data on the interview
- Family and changing gender roles II (ISSP 1994)
- Derived indices
Topics:
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Economic situations and
occupational life: assessments of present and future
economic situation in Germany and in respondent's own federal state;
assessment of current and future personal economic situation; education
and occupation; fear of unemployment or loss of business; length of
personal unemployment; social origin; evaluation of personal occupational
success and expectations for the future; attitude towards personal
occupation; fear of unemployment or loss of own business.
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Social inequality and the
welfare state: self-assessment of social class; fair share
in standard of living; evaluation of personal occupational success,
comparison with father's position; attitudes towards the German economic
system and evaluation of welfare state measures; realization of personal
ideas of success; evaluation of appropriate education opportunities for
everyone; attitudes towards social differences and conditions for success;
opinions on personal social security; stance on extension or reduction in
social services; opinion on level of income in personal household.
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Attitudes towards and
contacts with foreigners living in Germany: citizenship;
attitudinal scale; contacts with foreigners living in Germany or with
foreign guest-workers (Gastarbeiter, split) within the family, at work, in
the neighborhood, or among friends.
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Political attitudes:
political interest; postmaterialism (importance of law and order, fighting
rising prices, free expression of opinions, and influence on governmental
decisions); self-placement on a left-right continuum; confidence in public
institutions and organizations (public health service, federal
constitutional court, federal parliament (Bundestag), city or municipal
administration, armed forces, churches, judiciary, television, newspapers,
universities, federal government, trade unions, police, employment
offices, retirement insurance, employers' association, European Community
Commission, European Parliament, European Court of Justice);
party-sympathy-scales for the CDU, SPD, CSU, F.D.P., The Greens (Bündnis
90 / Die Grünen), Republicans (Republikaner), PDS; opinion on the
performance of the political system in Germany (political support).
-
Attitudes relating to the
process of German re-unification: attitude towards the
demand for increased willingness to make sacrifices in the West and more
patience in the East; unification is advantageous, for
East and West respectively; the future in the East depends on the willingness of
eastern Germans to make an effort; strangeness of citizens in the other
part of Germany; performance pressure in the new states; attitude towards
dealing with the Stasi-past of individuals; evaluation of socialism as an
idea.
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ALLBUS-Demography:
- Details about the respondent: gender; month and year of birth, age;
geographical origin and citizenship; migration to East or West Germany;
place of residence (federal state, administrative region, size of
municipality, BIK-type of municipality, Boustedt-type of municipality)
and length of residence; religious denomination, frequency of church
attendance; voting intention (Sonntagsfrage); general education,
vocational training; employment status; details about current
occupation, length of employment, industrial sector, affiliation to
public service, supervisory functions, working hours per week; date of
termination of full- or part-time employment; details about former
occupation; length of unemployment; respondent's income; marital status.
- Details about respondent's current spouse: general education,
vocational training; employment status; details about current
occupation.
- Details about respondent's steady partner: common
household; distribution of household chores; month and year of birth,
age; general education, vocational training; employment status; details
about current occupation.
- Details about respondent's parents: general education and vocational
training of father and mother; father's occupation.
- Composition of household: size of household; household income; type
of dwelling.
- Details about household members: relation to respondent; gender;
month and year of birth, age; marital status.
- Respondent's current memberships (Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund - DGB
(German Confederation of Trade Unions), Deutsche Angestelltengewerkschaft - DAG
(German Salaried Employees' Trade Union), other union, political party).
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Data on the interview:
beginning and end of interview; date of interview; length of interview;
presence of other people during the interview (presence of spouse,
partner, children, relatives, other persons); willingness of respondent to
cooperate.
Data on the interviewer: gender, age, educational level, identification of
interviewer.
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Family and changing gender roles
II (ISSP): attitude towards employment of mothers and
married women; role distribution of man and woman in occupation and
household; preferred extent of employment for women during different
stages of child raising; attitudes towards marriage, single-parenting,
cohabitation before marriage, and divorce; the ideal number of children;
views on the significance of children; opinion on separation of spouses
with and without children; obedience or independent thinking as the more
important educational goal; employment of mother during childhood of
respondent; current frequency of visits with one's mother; personal
divorce; living with spouse or other partner; prior divorce of current
partner; previous co-habitation without subsequent marriage; views on paid
maternal leave, financial aid for working parents, and on abortion;
opinion on pre-marital sexual intercourse, sexual intercourse between
minors, marital infidelity, and homosexuality of adults; experience with
sexual harassment at the workplace; management of income in marriage or
partnership; allocation of duties in the household; division of gainful
employment and principal earner in partnership; gainful employment in
various phases of child raising; general attitudes towards employment.
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Derived indices:
Inglehart-index; family typology, classification of private households
(according to Porst and Funk); International Standard Classification of
Occupations (ISCO 1968, 1988); occupational prestige (according to Treiman);
magnitude prestige (according to Wegener); occupational
meta-classification (according to Terwey); class position (according to
Goldthorpe); weights.
Total Population and Sample:
- Universe sampled: Federal Republic of Germany
- Sample of individuals: Two stage disproportionate random sample in
western Germany (incl. West Berlin) and eastern Germany (incl. East
Berlin) from all German speaking persons who resided in private households
and were born before 1 January 1976.
- In the first sample stage 104 municipalities (Gemeinden) in western
Germany and 47 municipalities (Gemeinden) in eastern Germany were selected
with a probability proportional to the number of adult residents.
- In the second sample stage 40 persons (in large cities a corresponding
multiple thereof) were selected at random from the municipal registers of
residents.
Method of Data Collection:
- Personal interview with standardized questionnaire (PAPI - Paper and
Pencil Interviewing)
- additional self-completion questionnaire (drop off) for ISSP
Primary Sampling Units / Sample-Points:
| West: |
111 |
Sample-Points (in 104 municipalities) |
| East: |
51 |
Sample-Points (in 47 municipalities) |
Response Rate:
| West: |
53.2 % |
| East: |
55.2 % |
Dataset:
| Number of Respondents: |
3450 |
| Number of Variables: |
436 |
Further Notes:
- Respondents from the area of the new federal states are oversampled so
that analysts can obtain a more detailed picture of this portion of the
population.
- In part a questionnaire with two split versions was used: In the
questions about ethnocentrism, the term guest-worker (Gastarbeiter), which
was used in previous ALLBUS surveys, was replaced by foreigners living in
Germany in 50% of the sample.
- A second version of this data set (194 variables) with a shortened demography module
is additionally available as ALLBUScompact
1994 (ZA No. 3717).
German site
© GESIS Michael Terwey
25.06.2008
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