Description & Citation--Study No. 4402

Bibliographic Description

Study No.:

04402

Title:

Nang Rong Projects [Thailand]

Principal Investigator(s):

Rindfuss, Ronald, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Entwisle, Barbara, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Walsh, Steve, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Funding:

United States Department of Health and Human Services. National Institutes of Health. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (2R01HD025482-07)

Bibliographic Citation:

Rindfuss, Ronald, Barbara Entwisle, and Steve Walsh. Nang Rong Projects [Thailand]. ICPSR04402-v5. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2009-02-27. doi:10.3886/ICPSR04402.v5

Scope of Study

Summary:

Social surveys were the starting point for research in Nang Rong, a district in the Buriram province of northeast Thailand. The surveys were part of three waves of data collection conducted in 1984, 1994, and 2000. The baseline was established in 1984 when a community survey and a household census were conducted in 51 study villages. The census obtained information on all members of all households within the study area. A second round of surveys was fielded a decade after the baseline, in 1994, building on and extending the original research design and focus. The 1994 data were collected through a community survey administered in all villages in Nang Rong (including but not limited to the original 51 study villages), a household survey providing a complete census of all households in each of the original 51 study villages, and a migrant follow-up survey. The migrant follow-up survey collected data on out-migrants from 22 of the original 51 study villages who had relocated to one of four urban destinations: (1) metropolitan Bangkok, (2) the eastern seaboard, a focus of rapid growth and development, (3) Korat, a regional city, and (4) Buriram, the provincial capital. The 2000 round of data collection again built on the previous data collection efforts and included a community survey administered in all villages in Nang Rong district, a household survey and complete census of the original 51 study villages, a migrant follow-up survey that tracked out-migrants from 22 villages to the four urban destinations as well as to rural villages within Nang Rong district. In addition, this round also included a geospatial component with the collection of locational data for dwelling units and agricultural plots.

Subject Terms:

agriculture, crop income, crop production, demographic characteristics, family history, family planning, family structure, household composition, income, job history, life history, livestock income, living conditions, migration, social networks

Smallest Geographic Unit:

village

Geographic Coverage:

Thailand

Time Period:

  • 1984
  • 1994
  • 2000

Date of Collection:

  • 1984
  • 1994--1995
  • 2000--2001

Unit of Observation:

individual, household, village

Universe:

Individuals, families, and households in Thailand's Nang Rong district.

Data Types:

survey data

Data Collection Notes:

The restricted-use data initially included four datasets that were intended to serve as linking files between the public and restricted versions of the data. However, the linking variables were merged into the appropriate restricted datasets and the linking files were eliminated.

Methodology

Sample:

For the 1984 data purposive sampling was used to select villages. Group discussion method with selected village informants was employed to collect village information. This yielded a sample of 34,035 people living in 5,860 households in 51 villages in Nang Rong district. For the 1994 data sampling consisted of a community profile, household survey, and a migrant follow-up survey. The 1994 community profile gathered information in all 310 villages in Nang Rong district, including but not limited to the 51 villages that were part of the original 1984 survey. The 1994 household survey was a complete household census in each of the 51 villages that were part of the 1984 survey. The 1995 migrant follow-up survey collected data from 1781 out-migrants from 22 of the 51 villages. The 22 villages were selected randomly within strata created by cross-classifying general location and distance from major paved roads in 1984. Persons resident in 1984 but no longer resident in 1994 were candidates for follow-up if they had gone to one of the four most popular destination areas: Bangkok, the eastern seaboard, Korat, or Buriram. For the 2000 data sampling consisted of a community survey profile, household survey, and a migrant follow-up survey. The 2000 community survey profiled all 346 villages in Nang Rong district. The 2000 household survey included a complete census of all person in all households in the 51 original study villages. The data include persons who migrated into the study villages as well as those 1984 residents still residing in those villages. The 2000 survey included a follow-up on all 1984 and 1994 residents in 2000. An annual life history was collected in 2000 for those aged 18-41. The 2000 migrant follow-up survey tracked more than 3,400 migrants from 22 villages to the four urban destinations and to rural villages within Nang Rong district.

Mode of Data Collection:

face-to-face interview

Extent of Processing:

All archived data undergo a confidentiality review and are altered when necessary to limit the risk of disclosure. The archive also routinely creates ready-to-go data files along with setups in the major statistical software formats as well as standard codebooks to accompany the data. In addition to these procedures, the archive performed the following processing steps for this data collection:

  • Performed consistency checks.
  • Standardized missing values.
  • Checked for undocumented or out-of-range codes.

Access and Availability

Note:

Detailed file-level information (such as record length, case count, and variable count) is listed in the file manifest.

Original ICPSR Release:

2006-12-22

Restrictions:

Part numbers 30 through 65 are restricted. Users interested in obtaining these data must complete an Agreement for the Use of Confidential Data, specify the reasons for the request, and obtain IRB approval or notice of exemption for their research. Apply for access to these data through the ICPSR restricted data contract portal, which can be accessed via the study home page .

Version History:

  • 2009-03-06 2009-02-27 Added restricted data.

  • 2008-09-02 Unique person ID variables were created in parts 2, 5, 6, 8 through 15, 17, 18, 20 through 24, and 27 by combining household and person-within-household ID variables. Variable names for migrant unique IDs were shortened in parts 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 20, 21, 22, and 24.

Dataset(s):

  • DS1: 1984 Household Data
  • DS2: 1984 Individual Data
  • DS3: 1994 Harvest Help Data
  • DS4: 1994 Household Data
  • DS5: 1994 Individual Data
  • DS6: 1994 Life History Data
  • DS7: 1994 Migrant Family Data
  • DS8: 1994 Migrant Individual Data
  • DS9: 1994 Migrant Interview Attempts Data
  • DS10: 1994 Migrant Life History Data
  • DS11: 1994 Moved Data
  • DS12: 1994 Remittance Data
  • DS13: 1994 Migrant Sibling Data
  • DS14: 1994 Plots Used Data
  • DS15: 1994 Sibling Networks Data
  • DS16: 2000 Household Data
  • DS17: 2000 Individual Data
  • DS18: 2000 Life History Data
  • DS19: 2000 Migrant Family Data
  • DS20: 2000 Migrant Individual Data
  • DS21: 2000 Migrant Interview Attempt Data
  • DS22: 2000 Migrant Life History Data
  • DS23: 2000 Moved Data
  • DS24: 2000 Migrant Sibling Network Data
  • DS25: 2000 Plots Data
  • DS26: 1999 Plots Data
  • DS27: 2000 Sibling Networks Data
  • DS28: 2000 Constructed Measures Data
  • DS29: 1994 Constructed Measures Data
  • DS30: 1984 Household Data - Restricted
  • DS32: 1984 Individual Data - Restricted
  • DS33: 1994 Harvest Help Data - Restricted
  • DS34: 1994 Household Data - Restricted
  • DS35: 1994 Individual Data - Restricted
  • DS36: 1994 Life History Data - Restricted
  • DS37: 1994 Migrant Family Data - Restricted
  • DS38: 1994 Migrant Individual Data - Restricted
  • DS39: 1994 Migrant Interview Attempts Data - Restricted
  • DS40: 1994 Migrant Life History Data - Restricted
  • DS41: 1994 Moved Data - Restricted
  • DS42: 1994 Remittance Data - Restricted
  • DS43: 1994 Migrant Sibling Data - Restricted
  • DS44: 1994 Plots Used Data - Restricted
  • DS45: 1994 Sibling Networks Data - Restricted
  • DS46: 2000 Household Data - Restricted
  • DS47: 2000 Individual Data - Restricted
  • DS48: 2000 Life History Data - Restricted
  • DS49: 2000 Migrant Family Data - Restricted
  • DS50: 2000 Migrant Individual Data - Restricted
  • DS51: 2000 Migrant Interview Attempt Data - Restricted
  • DS52: 2000 Migrant Life History Data - Restricted
  • DS53: 2000 Moved Data - Restricted
  • DS54: 2000 Migrant Sibling Network Data - Restricted
  • DS55: 2000 Plots Data - Restricted
  • DS56: 1999 Plots Data - Restricted
  • DS57: 2000 Sibling Networks Data - Restricted
  • DS58: 2000 Constructed Measures Data - Restricted
  • DS59: 1994 Constructed Measures Data - Restricted
  • DS60: 1994 Social Networks, Household Level - Restricted
  • DS61: 1994 Social Networks, Village Level - Restricted
  • DS62: 1984 Village Survey - Restricted
  • DS63: 1994 Village Survey - Restricted
  • DS64: 2000 Village Survey - Restricted
  • DS65: Individual ID Variable Linking File - Restricted
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