|
|
ALLBUS 2004 (ZA No. 3762, German version; ZA No. 3765, English version)
Data Collection Period:
Scientific Council:
- Hans-Jürgen Andreß, University of Cologne, chair;
- Andreas Diekmann, ETH Zurich;
- Hubert Feger, Free University of Berlin;
- Johannes Huinink, University of Bremen;
- Heiner Meulemann, University of Cologne;
- Rüdiger Schmitt-Beck, University of Duisburg;
- Heike Solga, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin
Data Collector:
- TNS Infratest Sozialforschung, Munich
Contents:
Social monitoring of trends in attitudes, behavior, and societal change
in the Federal Republic of Germany. The main topics in 2004 are:
- Free time activities and media use
- Social inequality and the welfare state
- Political attitudes
- Technical progress and computers (Digital Divide)
- Health
- Other topics
- ALLBUS-Demography
- Data on the interview
- National Identity (ISSP)
- Citizenship (ISSP)
- Derived indices
Topics:
-
Free time activities and media use:
reading books; reading magazines;
listening to records, CD's, cassettes; watching videos, DVDs; 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 the cinema, to pop
concerts, jazz or dance events; classic culture (i.e. opera, classical
concerts, theater, exhibitions); mobile phone use; number of television sets
in the household; frequency and overall time of watching television; taste
in television programs: 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 a daily newspaper per week.
-
Social inequality and the welfare state:
self-assessment of social class; fair share in standard of living; attitudes towards
the welfare state and social inequality; realization of personal ideas of success;
evaluation of appropriate education opportunities for everyone; most important
prerequisites for success in society; attitudes towards social differences
and conditions for success; opinions on personal social security; stance on
extension or reduction in social services.
-
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.
-
Technical progress and computers
(Digital Divide): attitudes towards modern technology, computers, and the
internet; time and place of first computer use; number of computers in the household;
purpose of computer use; time spent using the computer; special computer skills;
reasons for not using computers; internet use; time and place of first internet use;
reasons for not using the internet; internet access at home; purpose of internet
use; time spent using the internet; number of friends using the internet;
frequency of computer use at the workplace; internet access at the
workplace; internet use at the workplace for job and for private purposes.
-
Health:
overall health; physical and psychological shape during the last four weeks;
chronic illnesses; been sick in the last four weeks; reason for and frequency
of seeing a doctor in the last three months; time spent in hospital during the
last 12 months; officially recognized disability level; smoking habits; height
and weight; consumption of various foodstuffs and beverages; perceived influences
on personal health and speed of recovery from illness; working conditions; number
of times respondent was on sick leave during the last 12 months.
-
Other topics:
assessment of the present and future economic situation in Germany; assessment of
present and future personal economic situation; social pessimism and orientation
towards the future (anomia); attitudes towards the role of women in the family;
fear of unemployment or loss of own business.
-
ALLBUS-Demography:
- Details about the respondent: gender, month and year of birth, age, school
education, vocational training, employment status, details about current occupation,
affiliation to public service, supervisory functions, working hours per week, length
of unemployment, additional job to main occupation, status of non-employment, details
about former occupation, date of termination of full- or part-time employment, details
about first occupation, marital status, citizenship (nationality); geographical origin
and personal mobility, length of residence, respondent's income; religious
denomination, frequency of church attendance; membership in a political
party or trade union; voting intention (Sonntagsfrage), recall of vote in
last federal election (as part of ISSP), place of residence (federal state,
administrative district, size of municipality, BIK-type of region).
- Details about respondent's current spouse: age, school education, vocational
training, employment status, details about current occupation, status of
non-employment.
- Details about respondent's steady partner: common household,
age, school education, vocational training, employment status, details about
current occupation, status of non-employment.
- Details about respondent's parents: school education, vocational training,
details about parents' occupation.
- Description of household: size of household, number of persons older than 17
in household (reduced size of household), household income, types of income
in household, principal source of income, type of dwelling, size of dwelling
place, impact of noise and air pollution on living conditions, cat or dog in
the household.
- Details about household members: relation to respondent, gender, age,
marital status; type of school currently attended by children, children's
school education, children's university degree.
- Details about children not living in the household: gender, age, type of
school currently attended, school education, university degree.
-
Data on the interview:
length of interview; date of interview; presence
of other persons during interview (presence of spouse, partner, children,
members of the family, other persons); interference of other persons in the
course of the interview; willingness of respondent to cooperate; reliability
of information from respondent; reachability and willingness to participate;
details about respondent's residential building and its neighborhood;
willingness to participate in panel; participation in additional ISSP-survey.
Data on the interviewer: gender, age, school education, identification of
interviewer, experience as interviewer.
-
National Identity (ISSP):
attachment to one's place of residence, the federal state, Germany and Europe;
sources of personal identity; criteria for being German; attitudes toward
Germany; national pride; reasons for being proud of Germany; relative importance
of national interest and international cooperation; assessment of international
organizations; internet as source of information; assimilation or multicultural
society; pros and cons of migration; national roots; German citizenship and civil
rights for migrants.
Self-assessment of character traits (abridged Big Five Inventory measuring extraversion,
agreeableness, conscientiousness, emotional stability, openness to experience); self-classification on a
top-bottom-scale; self-description of place of residence; electoral
participation; recall of vote in last federal election.
-
Citizenship (ISSP):
qualities of a good citizen; freedom of assembly for religious fanatics,
revolutionaries and ethnocentrists; social and political participation;
memberships; relative importance of various civil rights; political alienation;
level of political awareness; subjective assessment of political influence
(political efficacy); political interest; trust in fellow men and in politicians;
political work in everyday life; national sovereignty and international organizations;
political parties and participation of citizens in political life; assessment of the
electoral process; commitment to serve the people, ability to self-reform, and corruption
in public service; working of democracy at the moment, 10 years ago, in 10 years;
attitude towards the limitation of civil rights.
Self-assessment of character traits (abridged Big Five Inventory measuring extraversion,
agreeableness, conscientiousness, emotional stability, openness to experience);
self-classification on a top-bottom-scale; self-description of place of residence; electoral
participation; recall of vote in last federal election.
-
Derived indices:
Inglehart-index; family typology, classification of households
(according to Porst and Funk); International Standard Classification of Occupations
(ISCO 1968, 1988); occupational prestige (according to Treiman); SIOPS
(according to Ganzeboom); ISEI (according to Ganzeboom); magnitude prestige
(according to Wegener); occupational classification (according to Terwey); class
position (according to Goldthorpe); Body Mass Index; 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 1986.
- In the first sample stage municipalities (Gemeinden) in western
Germany and municipalities in eastern Germany were selected with a
probability proportional to the number of adult residents.
- In the second sample stage individual persons were selected at random
from the municipal registers of residents.
Method of Data Collection:
- Personal interview with standardized questionnaire (CAPI - Computer Assisted
Personal Interviewing)
- additional self-completion questionnaire (drop off) for ISSP (two
split-versions).
Primary Sampling Units / Sample-Points:
| West: |
111 |
Sample-Points (in 104 municipalities) |
| East: |
51 |
Sample-Points (in 46 municipalities) |
Response Rate:
| West: |
44.9 % |
| East: |
47.6 % |
Dataset:
| Number of Respondents: |
2946 |
| Number of variables: |
895 |
Further Notes:
- Respondents from the area of the new federal states are oversampled.
- A second version of this data set (456 variables) with a shortened demography module
is additionally available as ALLBUScompact
2004 (ZA-No. 3763).
- GESIS-ZA also provides an English language version of ALLBUS 2004 (ALLBUS/GGSS 2004, ZA No. 3764)
and ALLBUScompact 2004 (ALLBUS/GGSScompact 2004, ZA No. 3765).
German site
© GESIS Michael Terwey
01.07.2008
|