Acces to data base 2011
In order to acces the Family and housing 2011 data base you have to contact : http://www.reseau-quetelet.cnrs.fr/spip/ Informations about the survey are available at : http://www.cmh.ens.fr/greco/enquetes/XML/lil-0766.xml
In order to acces the Family and housing 2011 data base you have to contact : http://www.reseau-quetelet.cnrs.fr/spip/ Informations about the survey are available at : http://www.cmh.ens.fr/greco/enquetes/XML/lil-0766.xml
(1) Wilfried Rault, Magali Mazuy, André Rivière et Laurent Toulemon, 2011.-« L’enquête Famille et logements associée au recensement de 2011 » , in Pratiques et méthodes de sondage M.-E. Tremblay, P. Lavallée, M. El Haj Tirari (Dir.), p. 113-117. (2) Estelle Bailly et Wilfried Rault, 2013.- Les pacsés en couple hétérosexuel sont-ils différents des mariés ?, Population & Sociétés, Numéro 497, Février 2013. (3) Guillemette Buisson et Aude Lapinte, 2013,- ...
The enquête Famille et logements questionnaire, associated to that of the census is a four pages self completed questionnaire, as before in 1999 and 1990. The 2011 enquête Famille et logements resumes some of these themes, but focusses on the family situations at the date of the survey, describing ithem into more details. The respondents are, in each dwelling, all adults (over 18 years old) of a ...
L'échantillon est composé de communes, au sein desquelles des secteurs d'agents recenseurs (2 400 grappes d'Iris ou de districts dans 1 500 commune des 22 régions métropolitaines) sont tirés au sort. Dans la plupart des communes une ou deux grappes sont sélectionnées, ce qui permet une grande dispersion de l'échantillon. Au total 365 000 bulletins ont été recueillis. Les grappes correspondent en moyenne à 150 personnes de ...
The census operation is described on the INSEE website. The Family and Housing Survey was designed as a pilot to test the feasibility and specify the conditions of conducting future surveys associated with the census on other topics.
In March 1999, with the collect of the population census, 235,000 women and 145,000 men over 18 years old living in private households filled out the additional Family survey questionnaire. The 1999 Family survey demographic questionnaire has been thoroughly redesigned, and is the first addressed to men as well as women; the upper age limit has also disappeared. The questionnaire addresses the respondents’ family history, including questions on ...
The 1990 Family survey is very similar to the 1982. The main innovation of the questionnaire is the new question: "Do you live in a couple?" that was later added in the Census questionnaire. This new version allowed the actualisation of the 1982’s results in a context where separations and new family forms were increasing.
The 1982 Family survey demographic questionnaire has been thoroughly redesigned, in order to provide material for the study of new family forms. The field was broadened to unmarried women, allowing a more precise analysis of fertility and nuptiality. The two-pages questionnaire was replaced by a four-pages one. As complements to the standard questions on the number of children born to the respondent’s mother, new questions have been ...
The 1975 Family survey questionnaire is very similar to the 1962 one, with very few exceptions. Its field is limited to women under-65 years old, as the older ones had difficulties to fill every dates in the 1962 version. A new question about the respondents’ siblings and their husbands’ siblings was added in the questionnaire in order to study the fertility heredity. The 1975 edition was partially ...
The 1962 Family survey was the occasion for a major transformation. A separate two-page questionnaire is coupled with the census questionnaire. The field was broadened to non-single women aged under 70. Single women were still excluded. Thus the 1962 questionnaire still express the hegemony of marriage. The 1962 survey data was analyzed with delay and the first findings were only published in the late 60’. For these ...