COD_2012_SLRC_v01_M
Livelihoods, Basic Services, Social Protection and Perceptions of the State in Conflict-affected Situations Household Survey 2012
First Round
Name | Country code |
---|---|
Congo, Dem. Rep. | COD |
Other Household Survey [hh/oth]
Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium (SLRC) are implementing a cross-country panel survey in five conflict-affected countries (DRC, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Uganda), with the aim of generating longitudinal quantitative data on people's livelihoods, their access to and experience of basic services, and their views of governance actors. This panel study tracks respondents. The first round was implemented in 2012/2013. The second round will take place in 2015.
Sample survey data [ssd]
Some questions are at the level of individuals in household (e.g. livelihood activities, education levels); other questions are at the household level (e.g. assets). A sizeable share of the questionnaire is devoted to perceptions based questions, which are at the individual (respondent) level.
'country name.dta' includes household level data and individual data in wide format.
'country name HOUSEHOLD ONLY.dta' includes household level data but no individual level data for household members.
'country name LONG.dta' includes individual level data only, in long format, for all household members.
2015-03-09
Basic pre-interview data: Information on location of the household, information on respondent and information on interview
Information on the household: ethnicity, religion, displacement of household
Basic individual information: Age, gender, marital status, education, school attendance of individuals within the household
Livelihood sources and activities: Livelihood activities on individuals, migration, main income sources of households, livelihood barriers faced by households, credit
Food security: food insecurity, who eats first, dietary diversity
Assets: House and land ownership, usage of land, number of specific assets owned (tools, housing assets, livestock, transport)
Shocks: experience of different shocks, coping strategies to deal with shocks
Crimes: experience of different crimes coping strategies to deal with crimes
Security: self-perceived safety
Health: Access to and satisfaction with health services
Education: Access to and satisfaction with education services
Water: Access to and satisfaction with water services
Social protection: Access to and satisfaction with social protection services
Livelihood assistance: Access to and satisfaction with livelihood assistance
Civil participation and grievance mechanisms: Knowledge of and usage of grievance mechanisms; problems with services; knowledge of and participation in civil participation opportunities
Perceptions of government: Perception of local and central government (and informal governance actors for some countries)
Congo, Dem. Rep.: South Kivu
Rural and urban
Randomly selected households in purposely sampled sites (sampling procedure varied slightly by country).
Within a selected household, only one household members was interviewed about the household. Respondents were adults and we aimed to interview a fairly even share of men/ women. In some countries this was achieved, but in other countries the share of male respondents is substantially higher (e.g. Pakistan).
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium | Overseas Development Institute |
Food and Agriculture Organization | |
Feinstein International Center | Tufts University |
Humanitarian Aid and Reconstruction | Wageningen University |
Name | Role |
---|---|
The Asia Foundation | Survey design |
Food and Agriculture Organization | Survey design |
Igarape Institute | Survey design |
Name |
---|
UK Department for International Development |
Irish Aid |
The sampling strategy was designed to select households that are relevant to the main research questions and as well as being of national relevance, while also being able to produce statistically significant conclusions at the study and village level. To meet these objectives, purposive and random sampling were combined at different stages of the sampling strategy. The first stages of the sampling process involved purposive sampling, with random sampling only utilized in the last stage of the process. Sampling locations were selected purposely (including districts and locations within districts), and then randomly households were selected within these locations. A rigorous sample is geared towards meeting the objectives of the research. The samples are not representative for the case study countries and cannot be used to represent the case study countries as a whole, nor for the districts. The samples are representative at the village level, with the exception of Uganda.
Sampling locations (sub-regions or districts, sub-districts and villages) were purposively selected, using criteria, such as levels of service provision or levels of conflict, in order to locate the specific groups of interest and to select geographical locations that are relevant to the broader SLRC research areas and of policy relevance at the national level. For instance, locations experienced high/ low levels of conflict and locations with high/ low provision of services were selected and locations that accounted for all possible combinations of selection criteria were included. Survey locations with different characteristics were chose, so that we could explore the relevance of conflict affectedness, access to services and variations in geography and livelihoods on our outcome variables. Depending on the administrative structure of the country, this process involved selecting a succession of sampling locations (at increasingly lower administrative units).
The survey did not attempt to achieve representativeness at the country /or district level, but it aimed for representativeness at the sub-district /or village level through random sampling (Households were randomly selected within villages so that the results are representative and statistically significant at the village level and so that a varied sample was captured. Households were randomly selected using a number of different tools, depending on data availability, such as random selection from vote registers (Nepal), construction of household listings (DRC) and a quasi-random household process that involved walking in a random direction for a random number of minutes (Uganda).
The samples are statistically significant at the survey level and village level (in all countries) and at the district level in Sri Lanka and sub-region level in Uganda. The sample size was calculated with the aim to achieve statistical significance at the study and village level, and to accommodate the available budget, logistical limitations, and to account for possible attrition between 2012-2015. In a number of countries estimated population data had to be used, as recent population data were not available.
The minimum overall sample size required to achieve significance at the study level, given population and average household size across districts, was calculated using a basic sample size calculator at a 95% confidence level and confidence interval of 5. The sample size at the village level was again calculated at the using a 95% confidence level and confidence interval of 5. . Finally, the sample was increased by 20% to account for possible attrition between 2012 and 2015, so that the sample size in 2015 is likely to be still statistically significant.
The overall sample required to achieve the sampling objectives in selected districts in each country ranged from 1,259 to 3,175 households.
The required sample sizes were achieved in all countries. Response rates were extremely high, ranging from 99%-100%.
No samples included at present. Calculations of design and response weights currently ongoing.
One questionnaire per country that includes household level, individual level and respondent level perceptions based questions.
The general structure and content of the questionnaire is similar across all five countries, with about 80% of questions similar, but tailored to the country-specific process. Country-specific surveys were tailored on the basis of a generic survey instrument that was developed by ODI specifically for this survey.
The questionnaires are published in French. The DRC data has been translated into English and a codebook in English is available for the DRC data.
Start | End |
---|---|
2012-09 | 2012-11 |
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Feinstein International Center | Tufts University |
Humanitarian Aid and Reconstruction | Wageningen University |
ODI had overall oversight over the data collection.
Data collectors (as described above) supervised on a day-day basis, with fieldwork supervisors included in each enumerator teams.
Enumerator trainings were held in all countries.
CSPro was used for data entries in most countries.
Data editing took place at a number of stages throughout the processing, including:
• Office editing and coding
• During data entry
• Structure checking and completeness
• Extensive secondary editing conducted by ODI
No further estimations of sampling error was conducted beyond the sampling design stage.
Done on an ad hoc basis for some countries, but not consistently across all surveys and domains.
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium | Overseas Development Institute |
Name | Affiliation | URL | |
---|---|---|---|
Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium | Overseas Development Institute | www.securelivelihoods.org | slrc@odi.org.uk |
Public use files, accessible to all after registration.
Use of the dataset must be acknowledged using a citation which would include:
Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium (SLRC) - SLRC survey - Round 1 - COUNTRY NAME. Dataset downloaded from [URL] on [date]
The user of the data acknowledges that the original collector of the data, the authorized distributor of the data, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.
2012/2013, the SLRC
Name | Affiliation | URL | |
---|---|---|---|
Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium | Overseas Development Institute | slrc@odi.org.uk | www.securelivelihoods.org |
DDI_COD_2012_SLRC_v01_M
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium | Overseas Development Institute | Documentation of the DDI |
2015-04-27
Version 1.0 (April 2015)
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