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ALLBUS 1998 (ZA No. 3000, German version; ZA No. 3753,
English version)
Data Collection Period:
Scientific Council:
- Klaus Allerbeck, University of Frankfurt;
- Jutta Allmendinger, University of Munich;
- Wilhelm Bürklin, University of Potsdam;
- Marie Luise Kiefer, University of Vienna;
- Walter Müller, University of Mannheim;
- Karl Dieter Opp, University of Leipzig;
- Erwin K. Scheuch, University of Cologne
Data Collector:
- GFM-GETAS (IPSOS), Hamburg
Contents:
Social monitoring of trends in attitudes, behavior, and societal change
in the Federal Republic of Germany. The main topics in 1998 are:
- Economic situation and anticipation of occupational
risks
- Importance of life aspects
- Free time activities, personal manner, and
lifestyle
- Use and assessment of media
- Political participation
- Attitudes towards politics and social inequality
- Attitudes relating to the process of German
re-unification
- ALLBUS-Demography
- Data on the interview
- Derived indices
Topics:
-
Economic situation and
anticipation of occupational risks: assessments of the
present and future economic situation in Germany; assessment of present
and future personal economic situation; fear of unemployment or loss of
business.
-
Importance of life
aspects: family and children, occupation and work, free
time and recreation, friends and acquaintances, kinship, religion and
church, politics and public life, neighborhood.
-
Free time activities,
personal manner, and lifestyle: reading books; reading
magazines; listening to records, CD's, cassettes; watching videos; using
the computer; surfing the internet; private further education; relaxing,
being lazy; walking or hiking; yoga, meditation; going to restaurants;
visiting friends; visiting relatives; playing games; taking short trips;
participating in politics; voluntary activities or honorary offices;
attending church or religious events; indulging in art and music; do it
yourself; active sport; attending sports events; going to pop concerts,
jazz or dance events; classic culture (i.e. opera, classical concerts,
theater, exhibitions); preference for folk music (i.e. Volksmusik), German
pop songs or rock music, classical music, jazz.
-
Use and assessment of media:
- Type of television reception device (satellite dish, cable,
television aerial), amount of time spent using the media (frequency of
radio and television use over the week, amount of time per day spent
watching TV or listening to the radio in minutes).
- Taste in television programs: TV shows or quiz programs, sports,
movies, news broadcasts, political magazines, art and culture programs,
traditional German "heimat"-films, detective films, action films, sitcom
or entertainment series; frequency of reading the daily newspaper per
week; sections of interest (i.e. politics, business, culture, sport,
local, international, advertisements or classified advertisements).
- Number of periodicals read regularly; titles of regularly-read
periodicals; assessment of credibility of each type of media; preferred
sources of information on political events (i.e. newspaper, television
or conversations).
-
Political participation:
articulation of one's own opinion, voting, public discussion, citizens'
initiatives, party work, support of political candidates,
demonstrations, house squatting, personal violence, intimidation of
opponents, abstinence from voting or casting a protest vote for another
party, collecting signatures, blocking traffic (each of these activities
were repeatedly raised with respect to the following (1) whether
respondent had a role in an activity concerning an important issue, (2)
whether respondent had been a participant in earlier activities, (3)
whether respondent had been recently active (since the beginning of 1996),
(4) whether the action was seen as politically effective (slightly
shortened list)).
Voting behavior in the past: respondent's eligibility to vote and
participation in German state elections (Landtagswahl); eligibility to
vote and participation in the European elections; eligibility to vote,
participation and voting behavior in the past Federal Parliament election;
recall of past vote in federal elections. Perception of possible influence
on politics (political efficacy, political alienation); gap between
politicians and citizens; self-assuredness in relation to political group
work; perceived influence on governmental policies; too much complexity in
politics; the politicians' closeness to constituents.
Norms for political participation: discontent as motivation for
engagement; belief in effectiveness as motivation for engagement; let the
elected representatives handle politics; participation in the vote as a
civic duty; moral acceptability of violence; plebiscite as a necessary
component of democracy; establishing democracy in all social areas.
Political participation in peer group; criticism of political situation;
political activity.
-
Attitudes towards politics and
social inequality: political support (satisfaction with
democracy in Germany); satisfaction with the performance of the federal
government; national pride; satisfaction with life in the Federal Republic
of Germany.
Statements on the legitimacy of social inequality: Inequality of income as
incentive to achieve; acceptability of differences in status; justness of
social differences.
Political interest; self-placement on a left-right continuum;
self-assessment of social class; postmaterialism (importance of law and
order, fighting rising prices, free expression of opinions, and influence
on governmental decisions); concerns about social issues in Germany
(environmental protection, the number of immigrants, the costs of German
unification, the development of crime figures, unemployment); perceived
representation of personal interests through organizations: trade unions,
Catholic and Protestant churches, ecological or environmental
organizations, CDU, CSU, SPD, FDP, The Greens (Bündnis 90/Die Grünen),
Republikaner, PDS.
-
Attitudes relating to the
process of German re-unification: demand for increased
willingness to make sacrifices in the West and for 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; pressures
to work harder in the East; attitudes towards the Stasi-past of
individuals; evaluation of socialism as an idea.
-
ALLBUS-Demography:
- Details about the respondent: gender; month and year of birth, age;
geographical origin and citizenship; place of residence (federal state,
administrative region, size of municipality, BIK-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, affiliation to public service, supervisory functions,
working hours per week; length of unemployment; date of termination of
full- or part-time employment; details about former occupation;
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; month and year of birth, age; general education, vocational
training; employment status; details about current occupation.
- Details about respondent's parents: general education of father and
mother; father's occupation.
- Composition of household: size of household; number of persons older
than 17 in household (reduced size of household); household income; type
of dwelling; telephone, listing in telephone directory.
- 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), Christlicher Gewerkschaftsbund - CGB
(Christian Federation of Trade Unions), Union Leitender Angestellter - ULA
(Association of Executive Staff), Deutscher Beamtenbund - DBB (German Civil
Service Federation), Deutscher Bauernverband (German Farmers Association), trade
association, Bundesverband der Deutschen Industrie - BDI (Federation of German Industries),
association of a liberal profession, other occupational association); respondent's current
and former memberships (choral society, sports club, leisure activity club, local citizens
club or community club, other social association, association of German expellees or refugees,
charitable association, religious/church organization, youth or student organization,
political party, citizens' initiative, environmentalist or alternative political group,
other club or association).
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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 (spouse, partner, children,
relatives, other persons); interference of other people in the interview;
willingness of respondent to cooperate; reliability of respondent's
statements.
Serial number of sample net, sample point and within sample point; number
of interview for interviewer; number of interview for sample point;
reachability of respondent; willingness of respondent to cooperate.
Data on the interviewer: gender, age, general education, identification of
interviewer.
-
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
- Household sample: Multi-stage random sample of private households in
the new and old states addressing all German speaking individuals who were
at least 18 years of age by the day of the interview.
- The selection of private households was based on the ADM-Master-Design
with following random-route. 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.
Method of Data Collection:
- Personal interview with standardized questionnaire (PAPI - Paper and
Pencil Interviewing)
Primary Sampling Units / Sample-Points:
| West: |
420 |
electoral districts (2 sample nets of 210
electoral districts each taken from the ADM-Mastersample) |
| East: |
192 |
electoral districts (2 sample nets of
2x48 electoral districts each taken from the ADM-Mastersample) |
Response Rate:
| West: |
55.4 % |
| East: |
62.0 % |
Dataset:
| Number of Respondents: |
3234 |
| Number of Variables: |
474 |
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 1998 the German ISSP was not combined with ALLBUS. Therefore, the
German ISSP data set 1998 has different respondents from ALLBUS 1998. It
can be obtained as a separate study from the Central Archive (ZA No.
3080).
- A second version of this data set (226 variables) with a shortened demography module
is additionally available as ALLBUScompact
1998 (ZA No. 3719).
- GESIS-ZA also provides an English language version of ALLBUS 1998 (ALLBUS/GGSS 1998, ZA No. 3753)
and ALLBUScompact 1998 (ALLBUS/GGSScompact 1998, ZA No. 3754).
German site
© GESIS Michael Terwey
01.07.2008
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