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<!DOCTYPE codeBook  SYSTEM "http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/DDI/Version2-0.dtd">
<codeBook xml:lang="en">
  <docDscr>
    <citation>
      <titlStmt>
        <titl>DDI description: ISSP 2002: Family and Changing Gender Roles III: Finnish Data</titl>
        <parTitl xml:lang="fi">DDI-kuvailu: ISSP 2002: perhe ja muuttuvat sukupuoliroolit III: Suomen aineisto</parTitl>
        <IDNo agency="FSD">0119</IDNo>
      </titlStmt>
      <prodStmt>
        <producer abbr="FSD">Finnish Social Science Data Archive</producer>
        <copyright>Finnish Social Science Data Archive</copyright>
        <prodDate date="2003-04-23"/>
        <prodPlac>Finnish Social Science Data Archive</prodPlac>
      </prodStmt>
      <biblCit format="MRDF">ISSP 2002 : Family and Changing Gender Roles III : Finnish Data [codebook]. Tampere : Finnish Social Science Data Archive [producer and distributor], 2012.</biblCit>
      <holdings location="Finnish Social Science Data Archive FSD" URI="http://www.fsd.uta.fi/english/data/catalogue/FSD0119/">Finnish Social Science Data Archive FSD</holdings>
    </citation>
    <notes xml:lang="fi">FSD:n aineistokuvailut (FSD metadata records), jonka tekijä on Suomen yhteiskuntatieteellinen tietoarkisto (Finnish Social Science Data Archive), on lisensoitu Creative Commons Nimeä-Epäkaupallinen 1.0 Suomi lisenssillä.</notes>
    <notes xml:lang="sv">FSD:n aineistokuvailut (FSD metadata records) av Suomen yhteiskuntatieteellinen tietoarkisto (Finlands samhällsvetenskapliga dataarkiv) är licensierad under a Creative Commons Erkännande-IckeKommersiell 1.0 Finland License.</notes>
    <notes xml:lang="en">FSD:n aineistokuvailut (FSD metadata records) by Suomen yhteiskuntatieteellinen tietoarkisto (Finnish Social Science Data Archive) is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 1.0 Finland License.</notes>
  </docDscr>
  <stdyDscr>
    <citation>
      <titlStmt>
        <titl>ISSP 2002: Family and Changing Gender Roles III: Finnish Data</titl>
        <parTitl xml:lang="fi">ISSP 2002: perhe ja muuttuvat sukupuoliroolit III: Suomen aineisto</parTitl>
        <IDNo agency="FSD">0119</IDNo>
      </titlStmt>
      <rspStmt>
        <AuthEnty>International Social Survey Programme</AuthEnty>
        <AuthEnty affiliation="University of Tampere. Department of Sociology and Social Psychology">Blom, Raimo</AuthEnty>
        <AuthEnty affiliation="University of Tampere. Department of Sociology and Social Psychology">Melin, Harri</AuthEnty>
        <AuthEnty affiliation="Statistics Finland">Tanskanen, Eero</AuthEnty>
        <othId affiliation="Finnish Social Science Data Archive">
          <p>Borg, Sami</p>
        </othId>
        <othId affiliation="University of Tampere. Department of Social Policy and Social Work">
          <p>Anttonen, Anneli</p>
        </othId>
        <othId affiliation="University of Helsinki. Department of Sociology">
          <p>Jalovaara, Marika</p>
        </othId>
        <othId affiliation="Statistics Finland">
          <p>Nieminen, Markku</p>
        </othId>
      </rspStmt>
      <prodStmt>
        <producer>University of Tampere. Department of Sociology and Social Psychology</producer>
        <producer>Statistics Finland</producer>
        <producer abbr="FSD">Finnish Social Science Data Archive</producer>
        <copyright>According to the agreement between FSD and the depositor.</copyright>
      </prodStmt>
      <distStmt>
        <distrbtr abbr="FSD" URI="http://www.fsd.uta.fi/">Finnish Social Science Data Archive</distrbtr>
        <depositr>Statistics Finland</depositr>
        <depDate date="2003-03-27"/>
      </distStmt>
      <serStmt URI="http://www.fsd.uta.fi/en/data/catalogue/series.html#issp">
        <serName abbr="issp">ISSP (International Social Survey Programme)</serName>
        <serInfo>
          <p>ISSP is a continuous programme of cross-national collaboration on social science surveys. It is based on annual, internationally integrated surveys carried out in all participating countries. A self-financed consortium of various research institutions is in charge of the programme. The ISSP data collection started in 1985, and in Finland in 2000, along with the national membership.</p>
          <p>The GESIS (the German Data Archive) is responsible for archiving the ISSP data. Country-specific codebooks and questionnaires can be found on the ZA's ISSP web pages. They are available for download via the GESIS ZACAT service. The service is free, but registration is required.</p>
          <p>In Finland, ISSP surveys are carried out in collaboration by three institutions: Finnish Social Science Data Archive, School of Social Sciences and Humanities at the University of Tampere, and the Interview and Survey Services of Statistics Finland.</p>
        </serInfo>
      </serStmt>
      <verStmt>
        <version date="2003-04-25">1.1</version>
      </verStmt>
      <biblCit>ISSP 2002: Family and Changing Gender Roles III: Finnish Data [computer file]. FSD0119, version 1.1 (2003-04-25). University of Tampere. Department of Sociology and Social Psychology &amp; Finnish Social Science Data Archive &amp; Statistics Finland [producers], 2002. Tampere: Finnish Social Science Data Archive [distributor], 2003.</biblCit>
    </citation>
    <stdyInfo>
      <subject>
        <keyword vocab="ELSST">women's role</keyword>
        <keyword vocab="ELSST">gender roles</keyword>
        <keyword vocab="ELSST">interpersonal relations</keyword>
        <keyword vocab="ELSST">family life</keyword>
        <keyword vocab="ELSST">occupational life</keyword>
        <keyword vocab="ELSST">domestic responsibilities</keyword>
        <keyword vocab="ELSST">happiness</keyword>
        <keyword vocab="ELSST">everyday life</keyword>
        <keyword vocab="ELSST">attitudes</keyword>
        <keyword>exhaustion</keyword>
        <topcClas vocab="FSD" vocabURI="http://www.fsd.uta.fi/english/data/depositing/FSD_topcClas.html">social policy</topcClas>
        <topcClas vocab="FSD" vocabURI="http://www.fsd.uta.fi/english/data/depositing/FSD_topcClas.html">social psychology</topcClas>
        <topcClas vocab="FSD" vocabURI="http://www.fsd.uta.fi/english/data/depositing/FSD_topcClas.html">sociology</topcClas>
        <topcClas vocab="CESSDA">family life and marriage (including household composition and generations)</topcClas>
        <topcClas vocab="CESSDA">gender and gender roles</topcClas>
      </subject>
      <abstract>
        <p>The year 2002 survey concentrated on household work strategies and how to combine work and family life. Respondents were asked whether family responsibilities had ever got in the way of their career prospects and had they ever changed their working hours or working arrangements to look after a relative. Respondents were asked to what extent they agreed with a number of statements relating to gender roles at work and at home and how to combine work and family life. Statements charted respondents' opinions on working mothers, housework sharing, marriage, divorce, maternity leave and childcare.</p>
        <p>Respondents living with a spouse or a partner were asked about the division of domestic responsibilities: who takes care of household money matters, who does the laundry, makes small repairs, does everyday shopping, household cleaning and cooking. Further questions asked how many hours respondents and their spouses/partners spend on household work, whether housework was equally shared and how often they disagree about the sharing of the work. Some questions asked who makes decisions about how to bring up children or how to spend the weekend.</p>
        <p>All respondents were asked whether their occupational or family life was stressful and whether they had recently felt tired because of family responsibilities or work. Happiness in general and satisfaction with work and family life were studied. Respondents with children were asked whether they and their spouse/partner had had a paid job before they had children, when children were at school and after the children left home. The survey also queried whether respondents' mothers had had a paid job before the respondents were 14 years old. Views on whether women should work outside the home when a couple does not have children were probed.</p>
        <p>Background variables included respondents' sex, year of birth, marital status, education, occupation, status in employment, trade union membership, political attitudes, membership in a church or a religious community, social class, gross income, occupation of the spouse, household income, household size and age structure, type of place of residence and region.</p>
      </abstract>
      <sumDscr>
        <timePrd date="2002-00-00" event="single"/>
        <collDate date="2002-10-25" event="start"/>
        <collDate date="2003-01-07" event="end"/>
        <nation abbr="FI">Finland</nation>
        <geogCover>Finland</geogCover>
        <anlyUnit>Individual
          <concept>Individual</concept>
        </anlyUnit>
        <universe clusion="I">Finns aged 15-74</universe>
      </sumDscr>
    </stdyInfo>
    <method>
      <dataColl>
        <timeMeth>Longitudinal: Trend/Repeated cross-section
          <concept>Longitudinal.TrendRepeatedCrossSection</concept>
        </timeMeth>
        <dataCollector>Statistics Finland</dataCollector>
        <sampProc>
          <p>Systematic sampling from Finland's population register. Sorting order: municipal code and year of birth.</p>
          <p>The size of the sample was 2,498 persons, of which 2,360 (94.5%) were Finnish-speaking and 138 (5.5%) Swedish-speaking. Address unknown or abroad for 10 sampled persons, so the questionnaire was sent to 2,488 persons. The number of non-respondents 1,120 and 15 refusals.</p>
        </sampProc>
        <collMode>Postal survey</collMode>
        <resInstru>Structured questionnaire</resInstru>
        <sources>
          <dataSrc>Province and mother tongue variables are based on population register information.</dataSrc>
        </sources>
        <weight>The data contain two weight variables, which were created using a calibration method in order to improve estimation efficiency and to correct non-response bias. The weights are based on the following population distributions: 1) gender, 2) age groups (15-24, 25-34, ..., 65-74), 3) NUTS2 areas so that Greater Helsinki area was treated separately, and 4) municipality type (urban, semi-urban, rural). The first weight variable (paino_1) weights the results to match the whole Finnish population (the sum of the weights equals to the size of the Finnish population). The second weight variable (paino_2) does not produce this kind of extension (the weighted mean is 1 and the sum equals to the number of cases). Both variables are based on the same calibration process, only the scale is different.</weight>
      </dataColl>
      <anlyInfo>
        <respRate>54.3%</respRate>
        <dataAppr>The occupation variables have been changed to comply with the ISCO88 classification.</dataAppr>
      </anlyInfo>
      <stdyClas type="A">Detailed and specific data description in Finnish and English. Variable frequencies, filter variables, variable and value labels, and missing values are checked. If necessary, the data are anonymised.</stdyClas>
    </method>
    <dataAccs>
      <setAvail>
        <accsPlac URI="http://www.fsd.uta.fi/">Finnish Social Science Data Archive</accsPlac>
        <collSize>Data: SPSS portable file. Data available also in other file formats.</collSize>
      </setAvail>
      <useStmt>
        <restrctn>Access to the data granted for scientific and teaching purposes. FSD's access application procedure. Restricted access.</restrctn>
        <citReq>The source must be acknowledged in any publication based wholly or in part on the data.</citReq>
        <deposReq>The archive must be informed of all publications where the data have been used.</deposReq>
        <disclaimer>The depositor and the archive bear no responsibility for any results or interpretations arising from the secondary use of the data.</disclaimer>
      </useStmt>
    </dataAccs>
    <othrStdyMat>
      <relMat>The classification of occupations used in the data set: ISCO-88 (COM) - the European Union variant of ISCO-88</relMat>
      <relStdy>FSD1178 Family Barometer 1998: Responsibility for Everyday Life</relStdy>
      <relPubl>Anttonen, Anneli &amp; Sipilä, Jorma (2007). Care Capital, Stress and Satisfaction. In: Women, Men, Work and Family in Europe (eds. Crompton, Rosmary &amp; Clare Lyonette), 152-170. Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills.</relPubl>
      <relPubl>Oinas, Tomi (2010). Sukupuolten välinen kotityönjako kahden ansaitsijan perheissä. Jyväskylä: Jyväskylän yliopisto. Jyväskylä studies in education, psychology and social research; 402. URN:ISBN:978-951-39-4117-8</relPubl>
      <relPubl>Suolinna, Satu (2012). Ryhmien moniulotteisten erojen testaus. Helsingin yliopisto: Sosiaalitieteiden laitos. Tilastotieteen pro gradu -tutkielma. hdl.handle.net/10138/33437</relPubl>
      <relPubl>Talvenkorpi, Heidi (2004). "Osaatko sanoa?": posti- ja käyntikyselyiden kautta tarkasteltuna. Kuopio: Kuopion yliopisto. Sosiaalityön ja sosiaalipedagogiikan pro gradu -tutkielma.</relPubl>
      <relPubl>Tirronen, Katja (2005). Pienten lasten isien asenteet kotityöhön, ansiotyöhön ja perhe-elämään. Savonlinna: Joensuun yliopisto. Savonlinnan opettajankoulutuslaitos. Kotitaloustieteen pro gradu -tutkielma.</relPubl>
    </othrStdyMat>
  </stdyDscr>
  <otherMat level="study">
    <labl>Questionnaire: pdf file in Finnish and in Swedish</labl>
  </otherMat>
</codeBook>