Townsend Thai Project Monthly Survey (1-196) Initial Release
Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)
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Title |
Townsend Thai Project Monthly Survey (1-196) Initial Release
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Identifier |
https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/A0COSJ
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Creator |
Robert M. Townsend
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Publisher |
Harvard Dataverse
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Description |
In accordance with the initial project design, an intensive Monthly Survey was initiated in August l998 in a subset of villages from the original sampling frame. In total there are 16 villages, four villages in each of the four original changwats. Specifically, one tambon per changwat was chosen from the 12 possibilities of the initial 1997 cross-section. That tambon displayed relatively little variation in the collected environmental variables across the four villages, thus allowing for the control, in a sense, of the environmental variation across villages and for the relatively large variation across the four villages in the collected economic institutional variables: informal networks, local village institutions, and/or use of national level ins titutions. Again, this selection was consistent with a primary goal of the overall project: a micro-level evaluation of family networks, markets, and formal institutions in credit and insurance. As the selected tambon in each changwat was also surveyed in the initial 1997 cross section, 15 of the households in each of the four villages had been interviewed previously, and soil samples taken. A target of 30 additional households was added so that the total would be 45 per village. Thus the overall target is 720 households. This monthly survey began as an initial village-wide census. Each structure and household was enumerated, and one individual per residential structure was interviewed concerning individuals who sleep or eat in that structure. This means that all individuals, households, and residential structures in each of the 16 villages can be identified in subsequent, monthly responses. The monthly survey itself began in August 1998 with a baseline interview on initial conditions of sampled households. These answers trigger further questions or forms which gather more specific information on the use of contracts and informal institutions, for example. Rosters provide an enumeration or list of items to be tracked in subsequent monthly interviews, and the monthly interviews themselves track inputs, outputs, and changing conditions. As the activities of a household may change, new forms are occasionally administered. In the Monthly Household Panel, each of the four-village clusters is assigned to a local team consisting of 12 enumerators, one field supervisor, one field editor, and one soil/environmental person. Much of the team consists of individuals hired from the local area, and they commute to work each day. The rest of the team, including those from the Bangkok office, reside in the local office. All interviewers speak the language of the households to which they are assigned - Thai, Lao, Khmer, or Sui. Common meals are eaten at the district office, and the first round of data entry takes place there. There are both periodic and random visits from the Bangkok staff, including the project director. Questionnaires, data disks, and environmental samples and measurements are sent to Bangkok, and about 10% of recently completed interviews are double-checked with random re-interviews of the surveyed households. Data are double blind entered into an ACCESS database that has dual Thai and English language capabilities. The enumerators themselves enter the data of another enumerator. All data entry is supervised and checked by the field supervisor and team leader. In Bangkok data entry takes place on ten PCs connected to a LAN system, with a separate data entry staff. Thai language answers are entered, translated into English, and then entered into a separate database. |
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Subject |
Social Sciences
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