1. Why Survey Methodology Needs Sociology and Why Sociology Needs Survey Methodology -- Part I : Sociological Theory and Survey Methodology -- 2 Towards Survey Response Rate Theories That No Longer Pass Each Other Like Strangers in the Night -- 3. Advancing Theories of Socially Desirable Responding: How Identity Processes Influence Answers to "Sensitive Questions" -- 4. Culture and Response Behavior: An Overview of Cultural Mechanisms Explaining Survey Error -- 5. Translating Lessons from Status Characteristics and Expectation States Theory to Survey Methods -- Part II; Applications -- 6. Stigma and the Meaning of Social Desirability: Concealed Islamophobia in the Netherlands -- 7. Is Not Knowing the Same as Being Incorrect? An Examination of 'Don't Know' Responses to Questions about Immigrant Population Size -- 8. Power, Culture and Item Nonresponse in Social Surveys -- 9. The Measurement of Sexual Attraction and Gender Expression: Cognitive Interviews with Queer Women -- 10. How Do Interviewers and Respondents Navigate Sexual Identity Questions in a CATI Survey? -- 11. Male/Female Is Not Enough: Adding Measures of Masculinity and Femininity to General Population Surveys -- 12. Correlates of Differences in Interactional Patterns among Black and White Respondents -- 13. Theories of Public Opinion Change Versus Stability and their Implications for Null Findings -- Conclusions and Future Directions for Understanding Survey Methodology.
Summary:
This volume ambitiously applies sociological theory to create an understanding of aspects of survey methodology. It focuses on the interplay between sociology and survey methodology: what sociological theory and approaches can offer to survey research and vice versa. The volume starts with a focus on direct connections between sociological theories and their applications in survey research. It further presents cutting-edge, original research that applies the "sociological imagination" to substantive concerns important to sociologists, survey methodologists, and social scientists and includes issues such as health, immigration, race/ethnicity, gender and sexuality, and criminal justice.
Series:
Frontiers in sociology and social research ; volume 4
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.