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XIX ISA World Congress of Sociology

RC33’s Program at the ISA World Congres 2018 in Toronto

 

 

  1. Questionnaire Design and Sampling (special) Populations
    Session Organizers: Theoni STATHOPOULOU and Oshrat HOCHMAN

601.4

Organizations’ Alleged Fear of Being Publicly Blamed for Sensitive Issues – an Insurmountable Challenge? a Critical Reflection Exemplified By the Investigation of Destructive Obedience in Public Institutions
Katharina KÄRGEL, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany

598.1

Refugee Surveys in Germany: Challenges of a “Special Population”
Susanne WORBS, Federal Office for Migration and Refugees, Germany; Nina ROTHER, Federal Office for Migration and Refugees, Research Centre, Germany

598.2

Surveying Syrian Refugees in the Netherlands
Johannes KAPPELHOF, The Netherlands Institute for Social Research/SCP, Netherlands; Jaco DAGEVOS, The Netherlands Institute for Social Research/SCP, Netherlands; Jannine MAAT, The Netherlands Institute for Social Research/SCP, Netherlands

598.3

Using Smartphone Technology for Research Among Refugees in Germany
Florian KEUSCH, University of Mannheim, Germany; Christoph SAJONS, Walter Eucken Institut, Germany; Susan STEINER, Leibniz University Hannover, Germany; Mariel McKone LEONARD, University of Mannheim, Germany

598.4

Work Commitment and Interview Effects in Cross-Cultural Studies
Hans DIETRICH, Institute for Employment Research, Germany

598.5

Methodological Challenges of an Online Survey about Water Sensitive Urban Design in an Upmarket South African Residential Estate
Claire WAGNER, University of Pretoria, South Africa; Jacques DU TOIT, University of Pretoria, South Africa; Carina FIEDELDEY-VAN DIJK, ePsy Consultancy, Canada

598.6

Using Online Surveys to Research Diverse Sexualities and Gender Identities: Opportunities and Challenges
Rebecca BARNES, University of Leicester, United Kingdom; Catherine DONOVAN, University of Sunderland, United Kingdom

  1. Cultural Response Styles
    Session Organizers: Martin WEICHBOLD, Nina BAUR and Wolfgang ASCHAUER

599.2

Neighbourhood Composition and Educational Aspirations: Heterogeneity, Scaling, and Heterogeneous Scaling of Spatial Effects.
Andreas HARTUNG, University of Tuebingen, Germany; Steffen HILLMERT, University of Tuebingen, Germany

599.3

Response Styles in Answering Scale Items By Older Respondents: The Role of Biographical, Contextual and Cultural Aspects
Wander VAN DER VAART, University of Humanistic Studies, Netherlands; Tina GLASNER, University of Humanistic Studies, Netherlands

599.4

Cross-Cultural Measurement Invariance Among German Migrants
Jonas BESTE, Institute of Employment Research, Germany

599.5

Explaining Response Styles and Response Bias Using the Attitude Towards Surveys and the Attitude Accessibility Towards the Research Topic
Christoph GIEHL, TU Kaiserslautern, Germany; Jochen MAYERL, University of Kaiserslautern, Germany

 

  1. Innovative Data Collection Methods for Special Populations
    Session Organizers: Wander VAN DER VAART and Tina GLASNER

600.1

Older People and Data Quality in Surveys. Does Measurement Error Increase with Age and Deterioration of Cognitive Abilities?
Emanuela SALA, Universita di Milano Bicocca, Italy; Daniele ZACCARIA, Istutituto Golgi Cenci, Italy

600.2

Identifying Vulnerable Populations through a Combination of Big Data, Demographic and Qualitative Techniques
Boroka BO, UC Berkeley, USA

600.3

Mixing and Combining Methods: Unexpected Transitions from Welfare to Work
Lukas KERSCHBAUMER, Institute for Employment Research, Germany; Andreas HIRSELAND, Institute for Employment Research, Germany

600.4

Studying Stigmatized Populations through Online-Communities
Victoria DUDINA, St. Petersburg State University, Russian Federation

600.5

Using an Onomastic Approach to Gain Insights from Migrant Groups? Lessons from the Social Survey Austria 2016
Dimitri PRANDNER, University of Salzburg / University of Linz, Austria; Martin WEICHBOLD, University of Salzburg, Austria

 

601

  1. Addressing the Challenges of Privacy, Sensitivity, and Security in Social Science Research
    Session Organizer: Diane WILLIMACK
    Chair: Diane WILLIMACK

599.1

How Collective Is Collective Efficacy? the Importance of Consensus in Judgments about Community Cohesion
Ian Brutnon-Smith BRUNTON-SMITH, University of Surrey, United Kingdom; Patrick STURGIS, University of Southampton, United Kingdom; George LECKIE, University of Bristol, United Kingdom

601.1

Informed Consent in the Age of Cybersecurity: Testing Messages and Questions and Exploring Perceptions of Privacy, Confidentiality, and Security
Alfred TUTTLE, US Census Bureau, USA

601.2

Challenges of Implementing an Online Survey for Assessing the Occupational Risk for Pregnant School Teachers in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
Kathrin BOGNER, Institute of Teachers‘ Health at the Institute of Occupational, Social and Environmental Medicine at the University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, Germany, Germany; Ann-Kathrin JAKOBS, Institute of Teachers‘ Health at the Institute of Occupational, Social and Environmental Medicine at the University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, Germany, Germany; Nelli WEHRWEIN, Institute of Teachers‘ Health at the Institute of Occupational, Social and Environmental Medicine at the University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, Germany, Germany; Annika CLAUS, Institute of Teachers‘ Health at the Institute of Occupational, Social and Environmental Medicine at the University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, Germany, Germany

601.3

Respondent Perceptions of Sensitive Items on a Self-Administered Application Form
Jessica GRABER, U.S. Census Bureau, USA

601.5

An Assessment of Objectivity in Sociological Research
Ram Narayan TRIPATHI, BANARAS HINDU UNIVERSITY VARANASI, India

 

602

  1. Unforeseen Difficulties in Empirical Research: Finding Causes of Failed Research
    Session Organizers: Wolfgang ASCHAUER, Nina BAUR, Dimitri PRANDNER and Martin WEICHBOLD

602.1

What Makes Failed Research? “Conventionalist” Reflections on Epistemic Failure in an Interview Study on Educational Classifications
Kenneth HORVATH, University of Lucerne, Switzerland

602.2

Methodological Complications in Sociology:an Assessment of Reliability and Validity
Ashutosh PANDEY, BANARAS HINDU UNIVERSITY VARANASI, India

602.3

Dealing with (Un)Expected in Qualitative Research Field-Work
Inga GAIZAUSKAITE, Institute of Sociology at Lithuanian Social Research Centre, Lithuania; Natalija VALAVICIENE, Mykolas Romeris University / National Examination Centre, Lithuania

602.4

Freedom of Information: Reflections, Limitations, and Opportunities in Social Research
Michael COLIANDRIS, Cardiff University, United Kingdom

602.5

Challenges of Creative Research with Adults and the Role of Confidence in Creativity
Jon RAINFORD, Staffordshire University, United Kingdom

 

  1. Methodological Issues in Non-Probability (Online) Surveys
    Session Organizers: Chiara RESPI and Emanuela SALA

604.1

The Feasibility of Obtaining Valid Inferences from Nonprobability Surveys
Joseph SAKSHAUG, University of Manchester, United Kingdom; Arkadiusz WISNIOWSKI, University of Manchester, United Kingdom; Diego Andres Perez RUIZ, University of Manchester, United Kingdom; Annelies G. BLOM, Collaborative Research Center 884 “Political Economy of Reforms”, University of Mannheim, Germany

604.2

Careless Responding: Rates and Reactions in a Quota Sample and a Voluntary Opt-in Sample
Hawal SHAMON, Forschungszentrum Jülich, Germany; Carl BERNING, Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz, Germany

604.3

Social Desirability Bias in on-Line Surveys: A Comparison Among Different Sources of Respondents
Pei-Shan LIAO, Academia Sinica, Taiwan

604.4

Stars, Hearts, Smileys, Buttons or Grids: How to Design Rating Scales
Vera TOEPOEL, Utrecht University, Netherlands

 

  1. RC33 Open Session
    Session Organizer: Vera TOEPOEL

605.1

Testing Measurement Equivalence across Nations: An Empirical Investigation of Environmental Concerns
Sandra MARQUART-PYATT, Michigan State University, USA; Chloe QIAN, HUI, Michigan State University, USA

605.2

Creative Methods of Data Collection in Music Therapy with Aggressive Adolescents
Andeline DOS SANTOS, University of Pretoria, South Africa; Claire WAGNER, University of Pretoria, South Africa

605.3

Assessing the Quality of Nonprobability Online Panels. the Italian Case.
Chiara RESPI, Università di Milano-Bicocca, Dipartimento di Sociologia e Ricerca Sociale, Italy

605.4

Comparing the Quality of Personal-Register and Non-Personal-Register Samples in Cross-National Interviewer-Administrated Surveys Using Internal Criteria of Representativeness – Comparative Analysis Based on European Social Survey Data
Piotr JABKOWSKI, Institute of Sociology, University of Poznan, Poland; Piotr CICHOCKI, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland

605.5

Comparability of International Survey Projects and Ex-Post Harmonization: Data Documentation and Quality Controls
Irina TOMESCU-DUBROW, CONSIRT, Polish Academy of Sciences and The Ohio State university, Poland; Kazimierz M. SLOMCZYNSKI, The Ohio State University and the Polish Academy of Sciences, USA; Weronika BORUC, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland

 

  1. Replicability in the Social Sciences: Extent, Reasons and Consequences
    Session Organizers: Jochen MAYERL, Elmar SCHLUETER and Volker STOCKE

606.1

Reason for the Failure to Replicate Results
Andrea BREITENBACH, University Marburg, Germany

606.2

Replicating Findings Regarding Attitudes Towards the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan in Five European Countries
Henrik ANDERSEN, University of Kaiserslautern, Germany; Christoph GIEHL, TU Kaiserslautern, Germany

606.3

Open Science As Foundation of Overcoming Replicability Issues in Social Sciences: The Case of Taiwan Indigenous Peoples Open Research Data (TIPD)
Ji-Ping LIN, Academia Sinica, Taiwan

606.4

A Replication of the Experiment on Separating Scale Points from Non-Substantive Responses of Tourangeau, Couper, and Conrad 2004
Cornelia NEUERT, GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany; Jan HÖHNE, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Germany; Timo LENZNER, GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany; Ting YAN, Westat, USA

606.5

“How to Ensure the Replicability of an Ad Hoc Research Strategy: A Few Lessons Drawn from the Sociology of the Concept of Public Service”
Charles BOSVIEUX-ONYEKWELU, ECOLE DES HAUTES ETUDES EN SCIENCES SOCIALES (PARIS), France

606.6

The Impact of Refereeing-Practices on Scientific Progress: Results from a Computer Simulation
Georg MUELLER, Univ. of Fribourg, Switzerland

 

  1. Methods for Maximizing Comparability in Cross-National and Cross-Cultural Surveys
    Session Organizer: Tom W SMITH

607.1

Using the Total Survey Error Paradigm to Minimize Comparability Error in Cross-National and Cross-Cultural Surveys
Tom W SMITH, University of Chicago, USA

607.2

Construct Equivalence, Probe Questions and Comparability of the Left-Right Scale in a Cross-National Perspective
Cornelia ZUELL, GESIS, Germany; Evi SCHOLZ, GESIS, Germany

607.3

Testing the Universalism of Bourdieu’s Homology Thesis: A Challenge for Comparative Analysis.
Yannick LEMEL, GEMASS, University Paris4-Sorbonne, France; Dominique JOYE, Lausanne University, Switzerland

607.4

How to Compare When Data Come from Diverse Sources: A 4-Level Model of Change in Institutional Trust over Time
Claire DURAND, University of Montreal, Canada; Luis Patricio PENA IBARRA, Université de Montréal, Canada; Nadia REZGUI, Université de Montréal, Canada

607.5

Measuring Social Networks and Social Resources in Comparative Perspective
Dominique JOYE, Lausanne University, Switzerland; Marlène SAPIN, FORS Lausanne, Switzerland

607.6

Using Paradata to Monitor Interviewers’ Instrument Navigation Behavior and Inform Instrument Technical Design: Case Studies from a National Household Surveys in Ghana and Thailand
Yu-Chieh LIN, Survey Research Center, University of Michigan, USA; Gina-Qian CHEUNG, Survey Research Center, University of Michigan, USA; Beth Ellen PENNELL, Survey Research Center, University of Michigan, USA; Kyle KWAISER, Survey Research Center, University of Michigan, USA

 

  1. Process-Oriented Micro-Macro-Analysis: Mixing Methods in Longitudinal Analysis and Historical Sociology
    Session Organizers: Nina BAUR, Maria NORKUS, Andreas SCHMITZ, Isabell STAMM and Michael WEINHARDT

608.1

Measuring the “Light Touch” of Library Programs in the United States
Lisa FREHILL, George Mason University, USA

608.2

Singing and Socializing: Applying Contemporary and Historical Data of Choirs As Proxy for Social Capital and Its Beneficial Impact on Wealth.
Peter GRAEFF, Christian-Albrechts University Kiel, Germany; Robert NEUMANN, Technische Universität Dresden, Germany; Saskia FUCHS, University of Kiel, Germany

608.3

Changes in Perception of Success and Agency in Poland: An Analysis Based on Two Kinds of Longitudinal Data
Weronika BORUC, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland; Danuta ZYCZYNSKA-CIOLEK, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland; Marta MIESZCZANEK, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland

608.4

The Shift to Three-Dimensional Thinking of the Family: Advancing Historical Multigenerational Mobility Research through the Use of Whole-Family Network Analysis
Megan MACCORMAC, The University of Western Ontario, Canada

608.5

From Representation to Attitude: A Quali-Quantitative Approach to the Detection of the Attitudes about the Representation of Bullying at School
Marianna SIINO, University of Enna “Kore”, Italy

 

  1. Doing Fieldwork in Challenging Contexts
    Session Organizer: Rima WILKES

609.1

Reflections on Fieldwork: A Comparative Study of Positionality in Ethnographic Research across Asia
Farah PURWANINGRUM, The University of Sydney, Australia; Anastasiya SHTALTOVNA, CERIUM – University of Montreal, Canada

609.2

Power Relations of Men in (Pro)Feminist Research: Two Fieldwork Experiences from Turkey
Atilla BARUTCU, Bulent Ecevit University, Turkey

609.3

Doing Participatory Research in a Patron-Client Society: Learning from Developing Multi-Scale Climate Change Adaptation Strategies for Farming Communities
Iqbal KHAN, Self Employed, Canada; Christian ROTH, Agricultural Systems Program CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences, Australia; Clemens GRUNBUHEL, Asian Institute of Technology, Bangkok, Thailand

609.4

“Exactly What They Need…”: Ethnography in Informal Care Settings.
Marén SCHORCH, University of Siegen, Germany

609.5

Neglected Aspects of Triangulation in Nigerian Social and Behavioural Research
Oka OBONO, Department of Sociology, University of Ibadan, Nigeria

609.6

Women Researching Violent Extremism: Gendered and Racialized Experiences
Alexia DERBAS, Western Sydney University, Australia; Virginia MAPEDZAHAMA, Western Sydney University, Australia

 

12 Spatial Analysis
Session Organizers: Leila AKREMI, Nina BAUR, Linda HERING, Maria NORKUS and Cornelia THIERBACH

610.1

Methodological Innovations in Spacial Analysis in the Context of Religion. Some Remarks about the Practice of Spacing in Religious Rituals on the Example of Silent Buddhist Meditation.
Thea D. BOLDT, Kulturwissenschaftliches Institut Essen, Germany

610.2

Deep Learning in Urban Research; Exploring Local Issues By Mapping Semantic Themes and Sentiment
Robin LYBECK, Åbo Akademi University, Finland

610.3

The Construction of Space in International Volunteering and the Global/Local-Split
Lucia FUCHS-SAWERT, Free University of Berlin, Germany

610.4

Global Flows, a Spatial Approach Towards Global Development
Rogerio GIUGLIANO, Federal University for Latin American Integration, Brazil

610.5

Mapping As a Tool of Improving Cluster Analysis Results
Shamil FARAKHUTDINOV, Industrial University of Tyumen, Russia

610.6

Evaluating Spatial Inequality of Healthcare in Process of Rapid Urbanization in China By Using Remote Sensing and GIS
Wen DOU, School of Transportation, Southeast University, Nanjing 210096, China; Yi GE, Nanjing University, China

610.7

Missing(s) in Space: Monte Carlo Simulations and a Bayesian Approach to Missing Data in Spatial Econometric Models
Christoph ZANGGER, University of Zurich, Switzerland

 

 

In addition, we had shared sessions with other committees:

JS-78

Comparative and Historical Sociology of Women’s Careers. Part II
Session Organizers: Akiko NAGAI and Fumiya ONAKA
Chair: Keiko SAKAKIBARA

 

JS-79

Comparative and Historical Sociology of Women’s Careers. Part I
Session Organizers: Akiko NAGAI and Fumiya ONAKA
Chair: Miki NAKAI

 

JS-82

Education and Social Inequality: Recent Methodological Developments
Session Organizer: Hiroshi ISHIDA
Chair: Satoshi MIWA

JS-32

Comparative and Historical Sociology of Women’s Careers. Part III
Session Organizers: Akiko NAGAI and Fumiya ONAKA

 

JS-41

Ethnography and Biographical Research
Session Organizers: Gabriele ROSENTHAL and Johannes BECKER
Chairs: Gabriele ROSENTHAL and Johannes BECKER