Hits 1-10 within 10 documents
Measurement and selection bias in longitudinal data: a framework for re-opening the discussion on data quality and generalizability of social bookkeeping data [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 34 (2009) 3. p.9-50
Preserving quantitative research-elicited data for longitudinal analysis: new developments in archiving survey data in the U.S. [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 34 (2009) 3. p.51-59
Cleansing procedures for overlaps and inconsistencies in administrative data: the case of German labour market data [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 34 (2009) 3. p.242-259
Identifying and explaining inconsistencies in linked administrative and survey data: the case of German employment biographies [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 34 (2009) 3. p.230-241
Effects of changes in data collection mode on data quality in administrative data: the case of participation in programmes offered by the German employment agency [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 34 (2009) 3. p.191-203
Finding and accessing the right archive and archival data: archival tools to support research and to make archives available to public [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 34 (2009) 3. p.71-77
Data integration and consolidation of administrative data from various sources: the case of Germans' employment histories [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 34 (2009) 3. p.215-229
The effect of social and institutional change on data production: the case of welfare state reforms on the rise and decline of unemployment and care-giving in the German pension fund data [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 34 (2009) 3. p.115-137
Combined Firm Data for Germany (KombiFiD): matching process-generated data and survey data [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 34 (2009) 3. p.204-214
Defining and distributing longitudinal historical data in a general way through an intermediate structure [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 34 (2009) 3. p.78-114