Guidelines for Time Use Data Collection

Growing and widespread interest in time begs the need for time use data collection and reporting standards. Initial guidance for comparative work was provided by the Multinational Time Use Project. However, changing technologies, methodologies, and divergent data needs have given rise to the need fo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social indicators research 1993-11, Vol.30 (2/3), p.197-228
1. Verfasser: Harvey, Andrew S.
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description Growing and widespread interest in time begs the need for time use data collection and reporting standards. Initial guidance for comparative work was provided by the Multinational Time Use Project. However, changing technologies, methodologies, and divergent data needs have given rise to the need for updated guidance. This paper, prepared with input from members of the International Association for Time Use Research, examines the history and applications of time use data, identifies and evaluates methodological options for time use studies, recommends options facilitating cross-national and cross-temporal comparability and identifies methodological challenges facing time use researchers. The study concludes that alternative collection methods appear to make little difference in the resulting activity and time use estimates at customary levels of reporting.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/BF01078728
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source Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Alma/SFX Local Collection; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Data Collection
Datasets
Financial budgets
Guidelines
History
History, theory and methodology
Methodology
Methodology (Data Collection)
Recommendations
Recreation
Research papers
Sample size
Social research
Sociology
Time
Time use
Time Utilization
United States federal budget
Use
User studies
title Guidelines for Time Use Data Collection
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