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@article{ Kropp2017,
 title = {The cases of the European Values Study and the European Social Survey - European constellations of social science knowledge production},
 author = {Kropp, Kristoffer},
 journal = {Serendipities: Journal for the Sociology and History of the Social Sciences},
 number = {1},
 pages = {50-68},
 volume = {2},
 year = {2017},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.25364/11.2:2017.1.4},
 abstract = {This article is a comparative analysis of the European Values Study (EVS) and the European 
Social Survey (ESS) using five analytical dimensions: agents, ideas, methods, institutions 
and context. From the outset, both surveys were closely connected to national and European 
social science institutions, had ties to the EU, and used survey techniques to address urgent 
contemporary political and social problems. Despite their similarities, the surveys represent 
two rather different constellations of social science knowledge production. The EVS emerged 
from a coalition of Catholic-oriented agents from a diverse set of social institutions driven 
by political and ethical concerns about social change in the 1960s and 1970s. The EVS used 
its links to various social institutions to set up and run the survey, and its ethical and political 
concerns and connections to Catholic Church organisations continued to play a significant 
role in its constellation. The ESS grew out of a scientific and technical aspiration among well-
connected and recognised Western European social scientists. It emphasised rigourous 
methods and drew on its founding agents' close relations with European institutions such as 
the ESF and the European Commission.},
 keywords = {European Social Survey; European Social Survey; EVS; EVS; Befragung; survey; Datengewinnung; data capture; Sozialwissenschaft; social science; Wissensproduktion; knowledge production; Umfrageforschung; survey research}}