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German General Social Survey (ALLBUS) - Cumulation 1980-2014
Creator
Klaus Allerbeck (University of Frankfurt)
Jutta Allmendinger (University of Munich;)
Hans-Jürgen Andreß (University of Cologne)
Wilhelm Bürklin (University of Potsdam)
Andreas Diekmann (ETH Zurich)
Hubert Feger (Free University of Berlin)
Detlef Fetchenhauer (University of Cologne)
Johannes Huinink (University of Bremen)
Marie Luise Kiefer (University of Vienna)
Frauke Kreuter (University of Munich)
Steffen Kühnel (University of Göttingen)
Karin Kurz (University of Göttingen)
M. Rainer Lepsius (University of Heidelberg)
Stefan Liebig (University of Bielefeld)
Karl Ulrich Mayer (Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin)
Heiner Meulemann (University of Cologne)
Walter Müller (University of Mannheim)
Karl Dieter Opp (University of Leipzig)
Franz Urban Pappi (University of Mannheim)
Erwin K. Scheuch (University of Cologne)
Rüdiger Schmitt-Beck (University of Mannheim)
Heike Solga (University of Göttingen)
Heike Trappe (University of Rostock)
Michael Wagner (University of Cologne)
Bettina Westle (University of Marburg)
Rolf Ziegler (University of Munich)
Study number / PID
ZA4584, Version 1.0.0 (GESIS)
10.4232/1.12574 (DOI)
Data access
Information not available
Series
Not available
Abstract
ALLBUS (GGSS - the German General Social Survey) is a biennial trend survey based on random samples of the German population. Established in 1980, its mission is to monitor attitudes, behavior, and social change in Germany. Each ALLBUS cross-sectional survey consists of one or two main question modules covering changing topics, a range of supplementary questions and a core module providing detailed demographic information. Additionally, data on the interview and the interviewers are provided as well. Key topics generally follow a 10-year replication cycle, many individual indicators and item batteries are replicated at shorter intervals.
ALLBUS/GGSS 1980-2014 compiles all of the time series in the ALLBUS program (i.e. it contains data for all questions that have been surveyed in at least two of the so far 19 cross-sectional surveys).1.) Economy: assessment of the present and future economic situation in Germany and in one´s own federal state; assessment of present and future personal economic situation.
2.) Political attitudes and participation: satisfaction with federal government, state government, German democracy, and with the performance of the German political system (political support); self-placement on left-right continuum; political interest; party inclination; voting intention (Sonntagsfrage); participation in last federal elections; recall of vote in last federal elections; party-sympathy-scales for the CDU, CSU, SPD, FDP, Republicans (Republikaner), NPD, PDS, DKP as well as the Greens (Bündnis 90 / Die Grünen); likelihood of voting for different political parties; political participation; voluntary activities or honorary offices; attitudes towards nuclear energy, the death penalty for terrorists, towards the privatization of publicly owned companies, and towards abortion; democracy scale; perception of individual influence on politics (political efficacy, political alienation); gap between politicians and citizens; self-assuredness with regard to...
Many but not all metadata providers use ELSST Thesaurus for their keywords.
Keywords
Not available
Terminology used is generally based on DDI controlled vocabularies: Time Method, Analysis Unit, Sampling Procedure and Mode of Collection, available at CESSDA Vocabulary Service.
Methodology
Data collection period
01/1980 - 09/2014
Country
Germany
Time dimension
Longitudinal: Trend/Repeated cross-section
Analysis unit
Not available
Universe
Not available
Sampling procedure
Probability: Stratified: Disproportional
Probability: Multistage
Household samples:
From 1980 to 1992 and in 1998, a multi-stage random sample of private house-holds was conducted addressing all persons who were at least 18 years of age (ADM Sample Design).
Person Samples:
In 1994, 1996, and from 2000 a two-stage, disproportionate random sample was conducted in West Germany (including West Berlin) and East Germany (including East Berlin), comprising all persons living in private households who were at least 18 years old on 1 January of the year of the survey. In the first sample stage mu-nicipalities (Gemeinden) in western Germany and municipalities in eastern Ger-many were selected with a probability proportional to their number of adult resi-dents; in the second sample stage individual persons were selected at random from the municipal registers of residents.
Personal interview with standardized questionnaire (PAPI – Paper and Pencil Interviewing; since 2000: CAPI – Computer Assisted Personal Interviewing), supplementary data from accompanying ISSP surveys (self-completion questionnaires, drop off).
Access
Publisher
GESIS Data Archive for the Social Sciences
Publication year
2016
Terms of data access
A - Data and documents are released for academic research and teaching.