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Family life surveys --- -Family life surveys --- -Family life surveys -
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For the Future Families Project, a questionnaire was constructed with the project's primary objective in mind - to get a thorough national reading on the ideal versus the real -- what Canadians want from family life compared to what they report they have experienced. To be thorough, the questionnaire was organized into sections dealing with key facets of family life -- the nature of the family; dating; sexuality and cohabitation; marriage; children, parenting and parents; and separation and divorce. It also included sections exploring Canadians' thoughts on how family life might be enhanced -- what areas warrant particular priority, who is responsible for realizing these priorities, and who should share in the actual costs.
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The data from the Second Malaysian Family Life Survey (MFLS-2) provide a rich but complex database. This User's Guide describes the MFLS-2 data structure and presents detailed descriptions of the variety of information available, and how it can be put together. This Guide is meant to be a companion to the MFLS-2 Codebook and provides guidelines on how to build analysis files from the data. For example, the authors discuss how to identify various individuals of interest (e.g. husbands, wives, children, parents of respondents) and how to link data from different parts of a particular person's questionnaire with one another and with data from the questionnaires of related individuals. The multiple file structure of the MFLS-2 makes linking files the major task in building analysis files. This Guide also addresses issues that arise in trying to link data from the first Malaysian Family Life Survey (MFLS-1) in 1976-77 and MFLS-2, which was fielded in 1988-89. One objective of MFLS-2 was to reinterview as many as possible of the original 1,262 MFLS-1 respondents. Seventy-two percent of the original MFLS-1 respondents were successfully reinterviewed, providing not only information on what happened to them since 1976, but a full retrospective history that recovered events previously reported in MFLS-1. The long time span of information for those reinterviewed MFLS-1 respondents and the chance to examine issues of recall bias require linking of MFLS-2 responses to MFLS-1 responses for these women and their families. Information and suggestions on linking MFLS-1 and MFLS-2 data are thus also provided in this Guide.
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Families --- Family life surveys --- Youth
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Families --- Family life surveys. --- Research.
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