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Afrobarometer Survey 1999-2001, Merged 12 Country - Africa

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Abstract --------------------------- The Afrobarometer is a comparative series of public attitude surveys that assess African citizen's attitudes to democracy and governance, markets, and civil society, among other topics. The surveys have been undertaken at periodic intervals since 1999. The Afrobarometer's coverage has increased over time. Round 1 (1999-2001) initially covered 7 countires and was later extended to 12 countries (1999-2001). The 12 country dataset was pieced together out of different projects including the intial Round 1 Afrobarometer 7 country survey, the old Southern African Democracy Barometer and similar surveys done in West and East Africa. The 12 country dataset consists of a combined dataset of the following countries: Botswana, Ghana, Lesotho, Mali, Malawi, Namibia, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe Round 2 (2002-2004) surveyed citizens in 16 countries. Round 3 (2005-2006) 18 countries, and Round 4 (2008) 20 countries. The survey covered 34 countries in Round 5 (2011-2013) and 36 countries in Round 6 (2014-2015). Round 6 (2014-2015) covers 34 countries and Round 7 (2016-2018) coveres 36 countries. Geographic coverage --------------------------- The survey has national coverage in the following 12 African countrires: Botswana, Ghana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mali, Namibia, Nigeria, South Africa,Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Analysis unit --------------------------- Households and individuals Universe --------------------------- The sample universe for Afrobarometer surveys includes all citizens of voting age within the country. In other words, we exclude anyone who is not a citizen and anyone who has not attained this age (usually 18 years) on the day of the survey. Also excluded are areas determined to be either inaccessible or not relevant to the study, such as those experiencing armed conflict or natural disasters, as well as national parks and game reserves. As a matter of practice, we have also excluded people living in institutionalized settings, such as students in dormitories and persons in prisons or nursing homes. Kind of data --------------------------- Sample survey data Sampling procedure --------------------------- Afrobarometer uses national probability samples designed to meet the following criteria. Samples are designed to generate a sample that is a representative cross-section of all citizens of voting age in a given country. The goal is to give every adult citizen an equal and known chance of being selected for an interview. They achieve this by: • using random selection methods at every stage of sampling; • sampling at all stages with probability proportionate to population size wherever possible to ensure that larger (i.e., more populated) geographic units have a proportionally greater probability of being chosen into the sample. The sampling universe normally includes all citizens age 18 and older. As a standard practice, we exclude people living in institutionalised settings, such as students in dormitories, patients in hospitals, and persons in prisons or nursing homes. Occasionally, we must also exclude people living in areas determined to be inaccessible due to conflict or insecurity. Any such exclusion is noted in the technical information report (TIR) that accompanies each data set. Sample size and design: Samples usually include either 1,200 or 2,400 cases. A randomly selected sample of n=1200 cases allows inferences to national adult populations with a margin of sampling error of no more than +/-2.8% with a confidence level of 95 percent. With a sample size of n=2400, the margin of error decreases to +/-2.0% at 95 percent confidence level. The sample design is a clustered, stratified, multi-stage, area probability sample. Specifically, we first stratify the sample according to the main sub-national unit of government (state, province, region, etc.) and by urban or rural location. Area stratification reduces the likelihood that distinctive ethnic or language groups are left out of the sample. Afrobarometer occasionally purposely oversamples certain populations that are politically significant within a country to ensure that the size of the sub-sample is large enough to be analysed. Any oversamples is noted in the TIR. Sample stages: Samples are drawn in either four or five stages: Stage 1: In rural areas only, the first stage is to draw secondary sampling units (SSUs). SSUs are not used in urban areas, and in some countries they are not used in rural areas. See the TIR that accompanies each data set for specific details on the sample in any given country. Stage 2: We randomly select primary sampling units (PSU). Stage 3: We then randomly select sampling start points. Stage 4: Interviewers then randomly select households. Stage 5: Within the household, the interviewer randomly selects an individual respondent. Each interviewers alternates in each household between interviewing a man and interviewing a woman to ensure gender balance in the sample. To keep the costs and logistics of fieldwork within manageable limits, eight interviews are clustered within each selected PSU. Further information on sampling protocols, including full details of the methodologies used for each stage of sample selection, can be found in Section 5 of the Afrobarometer Round 5 Survey Manual Mode of data collection --------------------------- Face-to-face [f2f] Research instrument --------------------------- Because Afrobarometer Round 1 emerged out of several different survey research efforts, survey instruments were not standardized across all countries, there are a number of features of the questionnaires that should be noted, as follows: • In most cases, the data set only includes those questions/variables that were asked in nine or more countries. Complete Round 1 data sets for each individual country have already been released, and are available from ICPSR or from the Afrobarometer website at www.afrobarometer.org. • In the seven countries that originally formed the Southern Africa Barometer (SAB) - Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Namibia, South Africa, Zambia and Zimbabwe - a standardized questionnaire was used, so question wording and response categories are the generally the same for all of these countries. The questionnaires in Mali and Tanzania were also essentially identical (in the original English version). Ghana, Uganda and Nigeria each had distinct questionnaires. • This merged dataset combines, into a single variable, responses from across these different countries where either identical or very similar questions were used, or where conceptually equivalent questions can be found in at least nine of the different countries. For each variable, the exact question text from each of the countries or groups of countries ("SAB" refers to the Southern Africa Barometer countries) is listed. • Response options also varied on some questions, and where applicable, these differences are also noted.

摘要 --------------------------- 非洲晴雨表是一项比较性的公众态度调查系列,旨在评估非洲公民对民主与治理、市场以及公民社会等议题的态度。自1999年起,该调查以定期间隔进行。非洲晴雨表的覆盖范围随着时间的推移而扩大。第1轮(1999-2001年)最初涵盖7个国家,后来扩展到12个国家(1999-2001年)。第12个国家数据集由包括第1轮非洲晴雨表7个国家调查、旧南部非洲民主晴雨表以及在西非和东非进行的类似调查在内的不同项目拼凑而成。第12个国家数据集包括以下国家的合并数据集: 博茨瓦纳、加纳、莱索托、马里、马拉维、纳米比亚、尼日利亚、南非、坦桑尼亚、乌干达、赞比亚和津巴布韦 第2轮(2002-2004年)调查了16个国家的公民。第3轮(2005-2006年)调查了18个国家,第4轮(2008年)调查了20个国家。第5轮(2011-2013年)覆盖了34个国家,第6轮(2014-2015年)覆盖了36个国家。第6轮(2014-2015年)覆盖了34个国家,第7轮(2016-2018年)覆盖了36个国家。 地理覆盖范围 --------------------------- 调查在全国以下12个非洲国家进行:博茨瓦纳、加纳、莱索托、马拉维、马里、纳米比亚、尼日利亚、南非、坦桑尼亚、乌干达、赞比亚和津巴布韦。 分析单位 --------------------------- 家庭和个人 总体 --------------------------- 非洲晴雨表调查的样本总体包括该国所有具有投票年龄的公民。换句话说,我们排除了任何非公民以及任何在调查当天未达到此年龄(通常为18岁)的人。此外,还排除了被认为对研究无关或难以到达的地区,如遭受武装冲突或自然灾害的地区,以及国家公园和野生动物保护区。实践中,我们还将居住在制度化环境中的个人排除在外,例如宿舍的学生、监狱或养老院的人员。 数据类型 --------------------------- 样本调查数据 抽样程序 --------------------------- 非洲晴雨表采用旨在满足以下标准的国家概率样本。样本旨在生成一个代表性样本,该样本代表给定国家所有具有投票年龄的公民。目标是给予每位成年公民一个平等且已知的被选为访谈对象的机会。他们通过以下方式实现这一目标: • 在抽样的每个阶段使用随机选择方法; • 在可能的情况下,在所有阶段按人口规模的比例抽样,以确保较大的(即人口较多的)地理单位有更大的概率被选中进入样本。 抽样总体通常包括所有18岁及以上的公民。作为标准做法,我们排除了居住在制度化环境中的个人,例如宿舍的学生、医院的病人以及监狱或养老院的人员。偶尔,我们还需要排除由于冲突或不安全而难以到达的地区居住的人。任何此类排除都在伴随每个数据集的技术信息报告中注明。 样本大小和设计: 样本通常包括1,200个或2,400个案例。随机选择的n=1200个案例允许对全国成年人口进行推断,抽样误差不超过±2.8%,置信水平为95%。样本量为n=2,400时,置信水平为95%时的误差范围降低至±2.0%。 样本设计是一个聚类、分层、多阶段、区域概率样本。具体来说,我们首先根据主要次国家政府单位(州、省、地区等)以及城市或农村位置对样本进行分层。 区域分层降低了遗漏具有独特种族或语言群体的可能性。非洲晴雨表偶尔会故意对国内政治上具有重要意义的人口进行过度抽样,以确保子样本的大小足够大,可以进行分析。任何过度抽样都在技术信息报告中注明。 样本阶段: 样本在四个或五个阶段中抽取: 阶段1:仅在农村地区,第一阶段是抽取二级抽样单位(SSU)。在城区不使用SSU,在一些国家农村地区也不使用。请参阅伴随每个数据集的技术信息报告(TIR),以了解任何给定国家的具体抽样细节。 阶段2:我们随机选择一级抽样单位(PSU)。 阶段3:然后随机选择抽样起点。 阶段4:访谈者随后随机选择家庭。 阶段5:在家庭内部,访谈者随机选择一个受访者。每位访谈者在每个家庭中交替对男性和女性进行访谈,以确保样本中的性别平衡。 为了将现场工作的成本和后勤保持在可控范围内,每个选定的PSU中集中了八个访谈。 有关抽样协议的更详细信息,包括样本选择每个阶段的详细方法,请参阅非洲晴雨表第5轮调查手册的第5节。 数据收集方式 --------------------------- 面对面 [f2f] 研究工具 --------------------------- 由于非洲晴雨表第1轮是从几个不同的调查研究中产生的,因此调查工具在所有国家之间没有标准化,以下是一些应予以注意的问题问卷的特点: • 在大多数情况下,数据集仅包括在九个国家或以上提出的问题/变量。每个国家的完整第1轮数据集已发布,并可通过ICPSR或非洲晴雨表网站www.afrobarometer.org获取。 • 在最初构成南部非洲晴雨表(SAB)的7个国家(博茨瓦纳、莱索托、马拉维、纳米比亚、南非、赞比亚和津巴布韦)中,使用了标准化的问卷,因此这些问题措辞和回答类别在这些国家中通常是相同的。马里和坦桑尼亚的问卷也基本上相同(原始英文版)。加纳、乌干达和尼日利亚各自有独特的问卷。 • 此合并数据集将来自这些不同国家(或“SAB”指南部非洲晴雨表国家)的响应合并到一个单一变量中,其中使用了相同或非常相似的问题,或者在至少九个不同国家中可以找到概念上等效的问题。对于每个变量,都列出了来自每个国家或国家集团的("SAB"指南部非洲晴雨表国家)的确切问题文本。 • 一些问题上的回答选项也各不相同,并且如有适用,这些差异也被注明。
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