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Netherlands Kinship Panel Study - Wave 1 - 2002-2004: A Multi-Actor, Multi-Method Panel Study on Solidarity in Family Relationships
Creator
P.A. Dykstra (NIDI)
M. Kalmijn (Tilburg University - Sociologie)
G.C.M. Knijn (Utrecht University - FSS)
A.E. Komter (Utrecht University)
C.H. Mulder (University of Amsterdam - AME)
A.C. Liefbroer (NIDI)
Study number / PID
doi:10.17026/dans-25m-jykv (DOI)
STAR: P1635
easy-dataset:33428 (DANS-KNAW)
Data access
Information not available
Series
Not available
Abstract
The Netherlands Kinship Panel Study (NKPS) involves the development of a database that allows the examination of family and kinship in the Netherlands from a dynamic multi-actor perspective. The increasingly complex nature of contemporary family relationships has posed society and policymakers with a series of new and challenging questions, but the lack of institutional and scientific growth in family studies has left this potential unrealized. The scarcity of high-quality databases has affected the competitiveness of Dutch family studies in the international academic community.The NKPS offers a large-scale panel survey that is accessible to the national and international research community. This study has been explicitly undertaken to provide a data resource for a wide range of researchers.The NKPS-data are collected from multiple actors, by multiple methods, and at multiple points in time.- Multi-actor. This implies that the focus is on relationships and networks of relationships rather than on individuals. Data are collected from individual respondents (so-called Anchors) as well as from family members (so-called Survey Alters). Survey Alters are: the partner, a maximum of two children aged 15 and over, father/mother, and a brother/sister aged 15 and over. Survey Alters do not necessarily co-reside with the Anchor.- Multi-method. A large-scale survey with pre-structured questions is complemented with in-depth studies (mini-panels) using flexible interview schedules. In the survey, the data are collected by means of face-to-face interviews and self-completion questionnaires.- Panel. Relationships are in constant flux. The NKPS is a panel study in order to understand the dynamic nature of family solidarity and to study causes and effects of solidarity within family relationships. The waves will be spaced three years apart.The first central component of the NKPS is the emphasis on the nature and degree of solidarity within family relationships. Solidarity is...
Terminology used is generally based on DDI controlled vocabularies: Time Method, Analysis Unit, Sampling Procedure and Mode of Collection, available at CESSDA Vocabulary Service.