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Position Paper on Mixed-mode Surveys
François Beck
Gwennaëlle Brilhault
Thomas Burg
Claudia De Vitiis
Petra Fekete-Nagy
Nadja Lamei
Ferenc Mújdricza
Fiona O'Callaghan
Fiona O'Riordan
María Clelia Romano
Patrick Sillard
Andreja Smukavec
Martina Stare
Zoltán Vereczkei
其他書名
2022 Edition
出版
Publications Office of the European Union
, 2022
ISBN
9276461116
9789276461111
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=NJY-zwEACAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
Under the auspices of the Directors of Methodology (DIME) and the Directors of Social Statistics (DSS) of the European Statistical System, a group of countries volunteered to prepare a "Position Paper" on current and future challenges with household surveys, namely methodological and data collection issues. Many countries pointed out that the Covid-19 crisis has prompted them to move from traditional household survey data collection to online, telephone or mixed-mode data collection. They had to make emergency choices and found that the available methodological and practical elements, though useful, were not entirely conclusive. It was therefore proposed to present to the Directors groups a "Position Paper" on mixed-mode surveys they could endorse. The present document is the results of this work, examining, in the light of the experience acquired by the Member States during the Covid-19 crisis, the methodological and data collection issues that should be explored together, over the next few years, on mixed-mode surveys. Most of the methodological issues have been reviewed in the Mixed Mode Designs in Social Surveys (MIMOD) project, but many of the suggestions for further development made within the framework of MIMOD have not yet been acted upon. In addition, considerable experience has been acquired by countries during this crisis, which must also be put into perspective and integrated into the reflection on the remaining open questions about mixed-mode surveys, including protocols for contacting people, telephone ollow-ups, etc. In order to get an insight into the latter, a specific survey to European National statistical institutes (NSI) was undertaken. The results of this survey are presented here. The group of countries that volunteered included representatives of the NSIs of Austria, France, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Slovenia and was chaired by France.