The impact of method bias on the cross-cultural comparability in face-to-face surveys among ethnic minorities

"This article investigates the impact of several sources of method bias on the cross-cultural comparison of attitudes towards gender roles and family ties among non-Western minority ethnic groups. In particular, it investigates how interviewer effects, the use of an interviewer with a shared ethnic background, interview language, interviewer gender, gender matching, the presence of others during the interview and differences in socio-demographic sample composition of non-Western minority ethnic groups affect the cross-cultural comparison of attitudes towards gender roles and family ties betwee... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Kappelhof, Joost W. S.
Dokumenttyp: Zeitschriftenartikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2014
Verlag/Hrsg.: DEU
Schlagwörter: Sozialwissenschaften / Soziologie / Social sciences / sociology / anthropology / methods bias / non-Western ethnic minorities / incomparability of samples / multi group Mimic / Erhebungstechniken und Analysetechniken der Sozialwissenschaften / Methods and Techniques of Data Collection and Data Analysis / Statistical Methods / Computer Methods / ethnische Gruppe / Minderheit / Befragung / Interview / Geschlechtsrolle / Familie / Niederlande / soziale Integration / kulturelle Integration / interkultureller Vergleich / Forschungsreaktivität / Antwortverhalten / Umfrageforschung / ethnic group / minority / survey / gender role / family / Netherlands / social integration / cultural integration / intercultural comparison / reactivity effect / response behavior / survey research
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29185178
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : http://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/39798

"This article investigates the impact of several sources of method bias on the cross-cultural comparison of attitudes towards gender roles and family ties among non-Western minority ethnic groups. In particular, it investigates how interviewer effects, the use of an interviewer with a shared ethnic background, interview language, interviewer gender, gender matching, the presence of others during the interview and differences in socio-demographic sample composition of non-Western minority ethnic groups affect the cross-cultural comparison of attitudes towards gender roles and family ties between these groups. The data used in this study come from a large scale face-to face survey conducted among the four largest non-Western minority ethnic groups in The Netherlands for which Statistics Netherlands drew a random sample of named individuals from each of the four largest non-Western minority populations living in The Netherlands. Furthermore, methods are introduced to estimate the potential impact of method bias on cross cultural comparisons. The results show that measurement of both gender roles and family ties constructs are full scalar invariant across the different ethnic groups, but that observed differences in attitudes between ethnic groups especially towards gender roles are influenced by method bias. This in turn leads to biased comparisons between ethnic groups because of differences in the size of the various sources of method bias, the differential impact of the same method bias between ethnic groups and the combination thereof." (author's abstract)