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Erste Ankündigung der 4. gemeinsamen Tagung der Deutschen
Arbeitsgemeinschaft Statistik "Statistik unter einem Dach" (DAGStat 2016)*
Zur 4. gemeinsamen Tagung der Deutschen Arbeitsgemeinschaft Statistik
(DAGStat 2016) laden wir Sie herzlich vom 14. bis 18. März 2016 nach
Göttingen ein. Entsprechend dem Motto der Veranstaltung "Statistik unter
einem Dach" beinhaltet das geplante Konferenzprogramm Beiträge aus allen
Bereichen der Statistik ebenso wie zahlreiche statistische Methoden.
Besonderes Anliegen der Tagung ist die Förderung des Austauschs über die
Grenzen der beteiligten Fachgesellschaften hinweg. Dieses Bestreben
zeigt sich auch darin, dass drei wesentliche Tagungen, nämlich das 62.
Biometrische Kolloquium, die Pfingsttagung der Deutschen Statistischen
Gesellschaft, sowie die 40. Jahrestagung der Gesellschaft für
Klassifikation Bestandteil der DAGStat 2016 sein werden.
Die Homepage zur DAGStat 2016
<http://www.uni-goettingen.de/de/485701.html>bietet bereits jetzt
Informationen zu den Themenschwerpunkten, eingeladenen Sprechern,
Anreise und Unterbringung in Göttingen. Beachten Sie bitte, dass
zeitgleich zur DAGStat die Cebit in Hannover stattfinden wird, so dass
sich eine frühzeitige Hotelbuchung empfiehlt. Als Plenarvortragende für
die DAGStat 2016 konnten Aurore Delaigle, Hans Rudolf Künsch, Simon
Thompson und Adalbert Wilhelm gewonnen werden. Tutorien werden zu den
Themen Event Data Analysis (Robin Henderson), Evidence Synthesis (Guido
Knapp, Gerta Rücker, Guido Schwarzer), Copulas in Practice (Ostap
Okhrin) sowie Integer-valued Time Series (Christian Weiß) angeboten.
Online-Registrierung und Abstract-Einreichung sind vom 15. Juli 2015 bis
zum 1. Dezember 2015 möglich.
Prof. Christine Müller, Vorsitzende der DAGStat
im Namen des Programmkomitees der DAGStat 2016
*First Announcement of the 4th Joint Statistical Meeting of the Deutsche
Arbeitsgemeinschaft Statistik "Statistics under one Umbrella" (DAGStat
2016) *
We cordially invite you to the 4th Joint Statistical Meeting of the
Deutsche Arbeitsgemeinschaft Statistik (DAGStat 2016) from March 14 to
18, 2016, in Göttingen. Under the motto "Statistics under one Umbrella"
the planned conference program contains contributions of all areas of
statistics and many applications of statistical methods. Scientific
exchange between the participating societies is one main aim of the
conference. This is reflected by embedding three important annual
meetings, the 62. “Biometrisches Kolloquium” (Biometric Society), the
40. “Jahrestagung der Gesellschaft für Klassifikation” (German
Classification Society) and the “Pfingsttagung der Deutschen
Statistischen Gesellschaft”.
The homepage DAGStat 2016 <http://www.uni-goettingen.de/de/485701.html>
already provides information about main topics, invited speakers,
travelling and accommodations in Göttingen. Please note that the Cebit
fair in Hannover will take place at the same time so we recommend an
early booking for accommodation. We gained Aurore Delaigle, Hans Rudolf
Künsch, Simon Thompson and Adalbert Wilhelm as plenary speakers.
Tutorials will be offered about the topics "Event Data Analysis" (Robin
Henderson), "Evidence Synthesis" (Guido Knapp, Gerta Rücker, Guido
Schwarzer), "Copulas in Practice" (Ostap Okhrin) and "Integer-valued
Time Series" (Christian Weiß).
Online registration and submission of abstracts will be possible from
July 15 to December 1, 2015.
Prof. Christine Müller, Chair of the DAGStat
on behalf of the program committee of the DAGStat 2016
Liebe Kolleginnen und Kollegen,
hiermit möchte ich auf eine aktuelle Stellenausschreibung (verlängert
bis 30.04.2015) für eine TV-L 13 (100%)-Stelle am Institut für
Soziologie der Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg hinweisen und
bitte um Weiterleitung an geeignete KandidatInnen:
http://www.verwaltung.uni-halle.de/dezern3/Ausschr/15_271.pdf
--
Beste Grüße
Oliver Arránz Becker
_________________________________________
Prof. Dr. O. Arránz Becker
Professor of Quantitative Methods in the Social Sciences
Martin-Luther University Halle-Wittenberg
Institute for Sociology
Adam-Kuckhoff-Str. 41
06108 Halle (Saale)
phone: +49 - (0)345 - 55 24260
e-mail: o.arranzbecker(a)uni-koeln.de (to be updated soon)
****************************************
External MZES Fellow
University of Mannheim
Liebe Kolleginnen und Kollegen,
ich möchte Sie auf den Workshop
Der Mikrozensus als Datenquelle für die empirische Sozial- und Wirtschaftsforschung:
Einführung in die Arbeitsmarktanalyse und das Arbeiten mit den Daten,
GESIS-Workshop in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Statistischen Bundesamt,
Mannheim, 24. - 25. September 2015,
Näheres unter https://training.gesis.org/?site=pDetails&child=full&pID=0xD917FFEF18D2A946…
aufmerksam machen und würde mich freuen, wenn Sie diese Information auch an interessierte Kolleginnen und Kollegen weitergeben.
Der Mikrozensus als größte laufende Haushaltsstichprobe in Deutschland steht der Wissenschaft u. a. als 70 %-Substichprobe (Scientific Use File) für Forschungsvorhaben zur Verfügung. Der Schwerpunkt des Fragenprogramms liegt auf soziodemographischen, sozioökonomischen und erwerbsstatistischen Merkmalen. Ziel der Veranstaltung ist, grundlegende Kenntnisse in Bezug auf das Arbeiten mit den Daten sowie einen Überblick über die Besonderheiten und Analysemöglichkeiten des Mikrozensus zu vermitteln. Im Zentrum stehen Fragen der Arbeitsmarktanalyse. Am ersten Tag werden Fachvorträge über die Konzeption, das Erhebungsdesign und Themenschwerpunkte des Mikrozensus angeboten. Darauf aufbauend werden diese Themen am zweiten Tag in praktischen Übungen vertiefend behandelt.
Mit freundlichen Grüßen
Bernhard Schimpl-Neimanns
-------------------------------------------------
Dr. Bernhard Schimpl-Neimanns
GESIS - Leibniz Institut für Sozialwissenschaften
German Microdata Lab (GML)
Postfach 12 21 55
D-68072 Mannheim
Tel: +49 621 1246-263, -265, -0 * Fax: -100
http://www.gesis.org/das-institut/kompetenzzentren/fdz-german-microdata-lab/
Deadline: 31 July 2015
9th International Conference on Social Science Methodology (RC33) September
11th 16th, 2016, Leicester, UK Call for Session Organizers
To all methodologically interested persons,
We want to invite you to suggest a session at the 9th International
Conference on Social Science Methodology (RC33) which will take place from
September 11th to 16th, 2016, at the University of Leicester
(http://www.le.ac.uk/).
If you are interested in organizing a session, please submit an abstract
containing the following information to John Goodwin (jdg3(a)leicester.ac.uk)
by July 31st, 2015:
‒ Session Title
‒ Session Organizers (Name, Email-Address, Institutional Affiliation)
‒ Session Abstract (containing a short description of the session and
the
type of papers you want to be submitted to the session).
The conference organizers will inform you, of you session has been accepted,
by September 15th, 2015, and there will be an open call for papers. Please
note that all sessions apply to the rules of session organization named in
the RC33 statutes (see below).
RC 33 Rules for Session Organization (According to RC Statutes)
1. The conference language is English. All papers therefore need to be
presented
in English.
2. All sessions have to be international: each session should include
speakers
of at least two countries (exceptions will need good reasons). Moreover,
each paper must contain a methodological problem (any area, qualitative or
quantitative).
3. Speakers can only have one talk per session. This is also true for
joint
papers: it will not be possible for A and B to present at the same time one
paper as B and A during the same session. This would just extend the time
allocated to each speech in the different sessions.
4. Sessions will have a length of 90 minutes with a maximum of 4 papers
or a
length of 120 minutes with a maximum of 6 papers. Session organizers can
invite as many speakers as they like. The number of sessions depends on the
number of papers there are.
5. There will be several calls for papers via the RC33 Newsletter. To
begin
with, session organizers can prepare a call for papers on their own
initiative, then at a different time, there will be a common call for
papers, and session organizers can ask anybody to submit a paper. RC33
members may distribute these calls via other channels.
6. Papers may only be refused for the conference if they do not present
a
methodological problem (as stated in Article 3 of the RC33 Statutes), are
not in English or are somehow otherwise estimated by session organizers as
not being appropriate for the conference.
7. Session organizers may ask authors to revise and resubmit their
paper so that
it fits these requirements. If session organizers do not wish to consider a
paper addressed to them, they should inform the author and forward the paper
to the conference chair who will find a session where the paper fits.
8. Papers directly addressed to the organization committee (and those
forwarded
from session organizers) will be offered to other session organizers (after
proofing for quality). It is then up to the organizers to include a paper in
their session(s) or not. If they think it does not fit into the session(s),
the papers should be sent back as soon as possible to the organizing
committee so that it can offer the paper to another session organizer.
9. There will be a conference Web site with information about the
procedure for
submitting a paper and deadlines.
****************************************************************************
***
*
* Karl M. van Meter BMS, Bulletin de Methodologie Sociologique
* karl.vanmeter(a)ens.fr (Bulletin of Sociological Methodology)
* tel 33 (0)1 43 25 26 57 Web http://bms.sagepub.com
* Blog http://karlvanmeter.wordpress.com/
* École normale supérieure distribution list bms-rc33(a)services.cnrs.fr
* 48 boulevard Jourdan free distribution list
aimsl(a)services.cnrs.fr
* 75014 Paris, France
* RC33, Research Committee Logic &
* BMS-AIMS Methodology of the International
* 45 rue Linné Sociological Association (ISA)
* 75005 Paris, France http://www.rc33.org/
*
* http://ens.academia.edu/KarlMvanMeter
****************************************************************************
***
Deadline: 30 September 2015
The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a Better World
(3rd ISA Forum of Sociology)
July 10th 14th, 2016, Vienna, Austria
Call for Papers (Deadline September 30th, 2015)
Dear RC33 Members,
We want to invite you to a session proposal to the 3rd ISA Forum of
Sociology (The Futures We Want: Global Sociology and the Struggles for a
Better World) which will take place from July 10th to 14th, 2016, at the
University of Vienna (Austria). Paper proposals have to be submitted via the
ISA website Confex
(https://isaconf.confex.com/isaconf/forum2016/gateway.cgi?) by September
30th, 2015, and you will be notified, if your abstracts have been selected
by December 15th, 2015. RC 33 will organize sessions on the following
topics:
1. Social Theory and Its Methods
2. The Futures We Expect: Time and Future Concepts As a Methodological
Challenge in Qualitative and Mixed Methods Research
3. Sociological Hermeneutics Methods and Methodology
4. The Complex Discursivity of Global Futures in the Making: Analyzing
Transnational Orders of Discourse
5. Comparison in Ethnographic Research
6. Contextualizing Cases and Types through Qualitative
Multi-Level-Analysis
7. Contextualizing Inter- and Multinational Survey Research. Discussing
Regional Perspectives on Effects and Outcomes of Global Trends
8. Linear and Non-Linear (Multi-Level-)Modelling with Aggregate or
Regional Data for Policy Analysis and Evidence Based Counselling
9. Generalizing Results from Experimental Research
10. The New Data Revolution in Sociology: Methodological and
Epistemological Issues
11. Datalinkage. Beyond Asking for Consent
Please see the detailed session abstracts below and see the conference
website
(http://www.isa-sociology.org/forum-2016/) for further details. Please also
note that all abstracts and papers have to be submitted and held in English
language.
Best wishes,
Martin Weichbold and Nina Baur
(ISA Forum Programme Coordinators)
Social Theory and Its Methods
Session Organizers:
María DE LOS ÁNGELES POZAS and Marco ESTRADA SAAVEDRA (Mexico) Session
Abstract:
In Latin America there is a growing interest in social theory and
methodology.
This has produced a set of researchers seeking critical reconstruction of
the most significant theoretical approaches in sociology and their
underlying methodological principles. Traditional tensions, never resolved
completely within sociology, among agency and structure, macro-micro,
qualitative-quantitative, led to theories and methodologies difficult to
reconcile, such as those articulated around social structure and those
departing from face to face symbolic interaction. Attempts at integration
between the two poles of these perspectives are carried out since the
eighties.
There were arguments to look for macro-basis of social interaction, or how
the macro consists of an aggregate of micro-episodes, and even philosophical
attacks on what was considered a spurious bifurcation of micro- and
macro-levels.
Recently the debate is formulated from a different perspective that
discusses the substantial or relational nature of subjects and objects
that make up social. In general terms, it is possible to observe a trend
to move from sociologies that privilege structure and the immersive nature
of society as a determinant of social relationships, to a relational
sociology that forces to rethink the major theoretical approaches in the
light of the new perspective.
The aim of the panel proposal is to reflect on the epistemological
principles implied in the main theoretical approaches. We think that this
forum constitutes an excellent opportunity to re-open the debate in Latin
America in dialogue with similar efforts in other parts of the academic
world.
Papers for this session should, therefore, address one or more of the
following
themes:
A critical reconstruction of theoretical approaches in sociology and
their
underlying methodological principles.
Epistemological principles implied in the main theoretical
approaches and
their relation to methods.
Mixed-method design and its relation to contemporary Social Theory.
Latin American appropriation of Anglo and European theoretical
approaches and
methods.
The Futures We Expect: Time and Future Concepts As a Methodological
Challenge in Qualitative and Mixed Methods Research Session Organizers:
Elisabeth SCHILLING, Sina-Mareen KÖHLER, Sebastian SCHINKEL and Regina
SOREMSKI
(Germany)
Session Abstract:
Time and future concepts are implicitly present in different fields of
sociology. It is central in the study of biography while reconstructing
the biographical events and processes we always relate to our notion of time
and to our future biographical prospects. In the sociological study of
childhood, youth and education the perception of time, time and future
design is an issue as it can critically influence the chances and the
development perspectives of the adolescent. The adaptation to different time
cultures is an important issue in the migration research. The discourses
about differences, alienation or integration often use time-related
terminology (e.g. biographical prospects,
forecasts) in order to legitimate own activities. In the organizational
studies time (and different time concepts) is a pivot point. This list of
topics is suggestive rather than exhaustive. Contributors may choose to draw
on material from a wide range of empirical spheres and theoretical
perspectives.
The session is linked not only to methodological discussions but also to the
interdisciplinary network for the study of time and future concepts and thus
we are interested in processes, which form individual time and future
concepts in different (e.g. different educational settings, migration,
biographical challenges).
Therefore, we highly welcome papers working on methodological aspects of the
study of time and future concepts. The papers can present methodological
conceptual work or results from the own field work. We are interested in
qualitative and mixed-methods approaches.
Sociological Hermeneutics Methods and Methodology Session Organizers:
Regine HERBRIK and Silvana FIGUEROA-DREHER (Germany) Session Abstract:
According to one of the founding fathers of sociology, Max Weber, the aim of
sociological research is to interpretively understand social action and
thereby explain its course and effects. Although understanding is
accomplished anytime by actors in everyday life, scientific methods have to
be employed, if understanding is to be achieved by social scientists in a
traceable manner and in compliance with the rules of good scientific
practice. In past decades, a multitude of qualitative methods have been
implemented into the social sciences in order to fulfil this task.
Among them, Social Hermeneutics has recently become increasingly important
for the analysis of several types of data, e.g. interaction sequences,
texts, gestures, pictures, video sequences, music or objects.It developed in
the context of the sociology of knowledge and is, therefore, closely
connected to the theoretical and methodological findings and thoughts of
this scholarly tradition. As a result, employing Social Hermeneutics does
not only involve the interpretive understanding of any kind of data, but
also reflects on the characteristics of scientific understanding, the
process of understanding in everyday life itself, as well as on the relation
between both of them.
Although, the prominence of Social Hermeneutics exceeded the borders of
German speaking sociology years ago, the international scientific discourse
on this methodological complex has just begun.
This session aims therefore at locating and bringing together sociologists
and social scientists of all nationalities employing Social Hermeneutics in
empirical studies, or dealing with theoretical considerations on methodical
or methodological questions in this field. Thereby, the specific
methodological challenges of Social Hermeneutics shall be explored, and the
benefits and drawbacks of its specific methods shall be discussed.
Papers debating general methodological questions, as well as those
discussing specific problems using Social Hermeneutics in a particular
research project are both equally welcome.
The Complex Discursivity of Global Futures in the Making: Analyzing
Transnational Orders of Discourse Session Organizer:
Reiner KELLER (Germany)
Session Abstract:
Global and transnational civil society, the proliferation of arenas and
organizations involved in the definition of world problems, the burgeoning
economic power of the BRIC-states as well as general recognition of a
post-colonial constellation together constitute a new and challenging
reconfiguration of transnational or global orders of discourse. The joint
session addresses sociological tools for analyzing the complex discursivity
of such sites of discourse, communication, and knowledge production. This
complexity is a result of the hybrid constellations of the actors and
knowledge claims involved, interconnections of heterogeneous arenas of
dialogue and negotiation, diverse cultural rationalities of factuality,
evidence, and legitimation, and also of translation between epistemic
cultures and languages from around the world. In order to address these
challenges, the session focuses on the reach of sociological tools for
analyzing transnational and global discourses as knowledge-making activities
which will profoundly shape the future. It intends to strengthen genuinely
sociological methodologies of discourse research a task which, according
to sociologist Adele Clarke, is at the center of our discipline today. The
session welcomes contributions which refer to theories, methodologies, and
methods of discourse research designed especially for sociological research
as well as presentations of empirical research that are related to these
questions.
Comparison in Ethnographic Research
Session Organizers:
Barbara STEFAN, Deniz SEEBACHER and Daniela JAUK (Austria) Session Abstract:
In order to identify commonalities between distant cases, understand the
wider relevance of specific phenomena, or to criticize and assess certain
social trends or qualities by means of contrasting along comparative
criteria the method of comparison started to be of growing importance in
ethnographic research. As the assessment of very particular cases attract
much less attention of the research community, and with the purpose of
meeting market-driven demands of publishers and reviewers, the need for
using examples and particularities not in its own right, but show how they
stand for larger phenomena distributed over time and/or space became
indispensable. Binary comparison, regional comparison, temporal comparison,
distant comparison or shifting comparison across time and space are possible
modes for this type of method (Gingrich 2002, also see: Scheffer/Niewöhner
2010, Gingrich/Fox 2002, Herzfeld 2001).
This regular session seeks to bring together researchers using the method of
comparison for their ethnographic research projects with a specific focus on
the methodological tools (e.g. development of indicators, similar interview
questionnaires, codes) used to recognize relations, linkages or contrasts
between distant cases. It motivates researchers to think if analyses
reaching beyond particular cases are not already scientific requirements and
if their ethnographies maybe include comparative methods without its
explicit reference.
Papers address questions such as:
How can comparison be realized in ethnographic research, so as to
address
larger phenomena?
What are insights, experiences, best and worst practices with
comparative
methodology?
What methodological tools can be used?
How did comparison help to generate theory?
Contextualizing Cases and Types through Qualitative Multi-Level-Analysis
Session Organizers:
Anja WEISS and Arnd-Michael NOHL (Germany) Session Abstract:
Struggles for a better world have been analysed on all social levels: in
the form of revolutions by comparative sociologists, in the form of
organizational change and collective mobilization or as individual mobility
and identity formation. For all of these topics multi-level analyses are
desirable: Taking change in schools as an example, reforms agreed upon on
state level need to be put into practice in individual school organizations,
taking into account the social milieus of pupils and organizational milieus
of teachers.
In methodological terms, multi-level analyses are a complex matter. In the
quantitative paradigm nested data with a high degree of colinearity and
small numbers on the lowest level can be a problem. Qualitative research
methods, on the other hand, rarely conceptualize analyses as multi-level.
Nevertheless, extensive debates about the selection of comparative cases,
the framing and contextualization of cases and the construction of a variety
of types point in exactly that direction.
The session is inviting methodological papers and empirical studies which
reflect on qualitative multi-level design:
How can different levels of inquiry be theoretically conceptualised
and
theoretically related to each other?
How can cases and types be contextualized by other levels of
research?
What kind(s) of internal heterogeneities are acceptable; when is
multi-level
analysis a necessity?
How to avoid methodological nationalism in sampling and analysis?
Can lower-level cases be placed in more than one higher-level
context?
How does multi-level analysis foster validity and generalizability?
Contextualizing Inter- and Multinational Survey Research. Discussing
Regional Perspectives on Effects and Outcomes of Global Trends Session
Organizers:
Jaroslaw GÓRNIAK (Poland), Dimitri PRANDNER (Austria) and Daniela
WETZELHÜTTER
(Austria)
Session Abstract:
Technological advances and societal changes experienced in the last decade
led to a number of new possibilities and challenges for survey research on a
global scale. It becomes seemingly easier than ever before to organize and
administer an international or at least multi-national research project. But
how are regional concepts and traditions affecting the design,
implementation and outcome of global studies and how are global studies
affecting these steps within the survey process used in regional studies?
Using this as a starting point the panel invites all researchers that are
interested to participate in the discussion about the challenges survey
research faces in such a setting. We want to specifically address the
following points:
How and at which points do the global trends in survey research and
usage
intersect with and/or influence established and often long standing regional
traditions and concepts?
Which theoretical and methodical challenges emerge for regional
survey
research, as there is an evident shift towards more globalized perspective?
How are those challenges met?
How can the results from both global and regional survey research be
put into
context with each other? Which pitfalls and opportunities have to be
addressed?
Contributions can both address theoretical ideas and concepts in regards to
survey research as well as practical experiences of realized research
projects.
However, the proposed papers should indeed address how the global or
regional scopes found in a project are reflected on in the methodological
background and if necessary even put into relation with each other.
Linear and Non-Linear (Multi-Level-)Modelling with Aggregate or Regional
Data for Policy Analysis and Evidence Based Counselling Session Organizers:
Peter GRAEFF (Germany), Stefanie EIFLER (Germany) and Heinz LEITGÖB
(Austria) Session Abstract:
In order to struggle for a better world, policy implications and evidence
based counselling should refer to scientific results based on state of the
art theorizing and analysis. Ifas is often the case for this specific kind
of researchaggregated/regional data serve as the empirical basis, several
methodological and statistical challenges occur.
The most common problems pertain e.g. the identification and assessment of
causal effects derived from aggregated/regional data, violations of
conventional model assumptions, sample inherent problems or challenges of
adequately modelling specific phenomena such as inequality.
Consequently, this session welcomes papers presenting problem
identifications and solutions to such complexities arising from the nature
of aggregate data in the context of policy analysis and evidence based
counselling. Each paper should refer to specific methodological or
statistical aspects and may answer questions like the following:
How can causal effects at different levels of analysis (including
the
individual level) be simultaneously identified when aggregate data are
applied?
How can multi-level designed studies contribute to comparative
analysis aiming
at the formulation of policy recommendations?
How do we deal with sample inherent problems of aggregate/regional
data, e.g.
(extremely) small sample sizes or different contextual conditions?
How can we measure complex social phenomena by indices and apply
index-based
results in ways that improvements in policy analysis can be achieved?
How can we accurately account for specific characteristics of global
social
key phenomena such as inequality, corruption or democracy.
Generalizing Results from Experimental Research Session Organizers:
Stefanie EIFLER (Germany), Marc KEUSCHNIGG (Germany), Susanne VOGL (Austria)
and Tobias WOLBRING (Germany) Session Abstract:
Experimental methods are increasingly applied in the social sciences. We
believe that, as with other social sciences, experiments will grow strongly
in relevance for sociology in upcoming years. A crucial concern is that
small-scale experiments (e.g. on individuals norm adherence), both in the
lab and in the field, are not generalizable to other social conditions and
thus do not contribute to answering large-scale research questions (e.g. the
stability of social order).Solutions to this methodological problem are
essential for the spreading of experimental methods in the social sciences.
This particularly holds for sociology which is mainly concerned with
aggregate states, dynamics, and outcomes.
We invite contributions dealing with this methodological problem of
experimental research. This might include papers stressing the role of
theory in experimental design, the search for mechanisms to obtain
generalizable results from context-sensitive designs, and studies comparing
differences across experimental designs. More specifically, we seek
theoretical, methodological, and empirical contributions to the following
questions:
How can intervention studies overcome problems such as lack of
theory?
Can theory contribute to the resolution of context dependency in
experimental
research?
What can social theory gain from small-scale experiments?
What are their potentials and pitfalls of large-scale online
experiments?
Do field experiments live up to their promise of bringing context
back in?
What can we learn from factorial surveys and split-ballot
experiments?
What do we know about the problems and prospects of different types
of
experiments?
How do reactivity, effect heterogeneity, and other distortions to
causal
inference affect applicability of experimental methods?
The New Data Revolution in Sociology: Methodological and Epistemological
Issues Session Organizers:
Biagio ARAGONA and Enrica AMATURO (Italy) Session Abstract:
The availability of new data (big data, big corpora, open data, linked data,
etc.) offers to sociology both oppurtunities and challenges. If it
constitutes a chance to enhance knowledge on some key areas (i.e.
development, social inequalities, health, communication research, etc.) it
also presents many usual social research challenges in new forms. The
implications of using new data in the social science domain have been widely
studied from the analytics point of view, but others methodological issues
have to be closely assessed (i.e.
population and sample selection, validity, data structuring, metadata
collection, timeliness and real-time data collection, etc.). Moreover, the
epistemological consequences of the use of new data need to be considered.
First of all, the re-emergence of data driven approaches opposed to theory
laden approaches. Furthermore, the great relevance of textual data, which
means a big difference with the past, where quantitative social research
mainly worked with numerical data. Finally, new data pose data access
issues, both as access allowance (i.e. open data) and access constraint
(i.e. social network data).
Datalinkage. Beyond Asking for Consent
Session Organizer:
Emanuela SALA (Italy)
Session Abstract:
Many surveys worldwide have started to link respondents' survey data to
their administrative records (e. g., data from National Health Services).
There is an established body of research that looked at the drivers of
respondents' consent to datalinkage. However, research that looked at other
aspects of datalinkage is still rare. This session aims at fostering
discussion on the research potential of linked data. Papers on both
substantive and methodological issues are welcome.