Social research facilities survey 2009

DOI

The Social Research Facilities Survey was undertaken under the auspices of the ESRC Census programme to obtain representative information on the work practices and working environment of social scientists in the UK. The study focuses on 10 social science disciplines; economics and econometrics, sociology, business and management studies, statistics and operational research, psychology, geography, social policy and administration, politics and international studies, education and accounting and finance. The survey was undertaken in autumn 2009, with the fieldwork undertaken in the period September and October. A sampling frame was produced on the basis of departmental staff lists. A disproportionate probability sample was drawn, which resulted in an inflated number of data users being in the sample. As a result, the data must be weighted prior to use. 1,001 social science academics were sampled of whom 929 were eligible. 598 responses were received. Topics included; where you work, facilities at your institution, working at home, about your research, using individual data, using personal data and about you. It included questions about whether the respondent conducted quantitative research and their use of data. The focus on data use and research facilities allowed the project team to explore the extent to which current and future data access methods are compatible with the way in which researchers can use data. This information was gathered in order to inform plans for providing access to microdata, particularly those arising from the census. It is important that we understand the way in which researchers use data if we are to ensure that regulation of that behaviour is appropriate, effective and preserves the utility of data sources. This project seeks to explore the way in which users use data and the environment in which they do so in order to assess the extent to which registration conditions are workable or problematic. The project is composed of a sample survey of UK social science academics, with a target sample of 1,000. It will ask them about facilities available to them at their place of work, and whether they work away from their employer’s business, as well as asking what resources are available to their students. Two focus groups will be undertaken to explore more complex and discursive issues, particularly those which relate to data access issues with which many researchers will not be familiar. Respondents will not be limited to users of microdata. However, the primary goal of the research is to inform data access discussions relating to the census microdata, and more widely as we look towards the delivery of other data sources for producing census-like outputs.

Survey carried of social scientists in the UK, carried out via multi-mode questionnaire. The main instruments were postal or online self-completion forms. Non-respondents at the end of the self completion stage were followed up and offered a telephone interview. The survey was conducted with a disproportionate probability sample of academics from departments within 10 social science disciplines in autumn 2009. The questionnaire covered topics including: where social scientists work; what type of institutional office space they have; what IT facilities are available to them and their institution and at home; levels of satisfaction with office space and IT facilities; type of research undertaken in last 2 years (quantitative, qualitative, theoretical/literature based); data use in last 2 years; willingness to meet more demanding data access requirements and teaching responsibilities. The dataset contains 598 cases and 151 variables. Detailed information on the methodology is described in the technical report.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-852316
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=fb64114691cb0f237f40a6cd422143c3b357c52d415d367fa7506c27dad51e34
Provenance
Creator Wathan, J, University of Manchester
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2016
Funding Reference Economic and Social Research Council
Rights Josephine Wathan, University of Manchester; The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Numeric
Discipline Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Aquaculture; Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Aquaculture and Veterinary Medicine; Life Sciences; Social Sciences; Social and Behavioural Sciences; Soil Sciences
Spatial Coverage United Kingdom