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The Six Country Immigrant Integration Comparative Survey (SCIICS): Technical report

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  • Ersanilli, Evelyn
  • Koopmans, Ruud

Abstract

The Six Country Immigrant Integration Comparative Survey (SCIICS) is a large-scale telephone survey conducted in 2008. The aim was to collect comparable data across European countries (the Netherlands, Germany, France, Belgium, Austria and Sweden) with different integration policies as well as variation on other variables to enable testing for contextual effects. SCIICS was designed to maximize cross-national data comparability by reducing sources of confounding variance. It employs a double-comparative design which looks at two immigrant groups (Turks and Moroccans) and a comparison group of natives from the six countries mentioned above. The immigrant target groups have been narrowed down to people who migrated in the guest-worker era (before 1975) and their children and grandchildren who were either born in the survey country or moved there before turning 18. To further increase comparability, half of the sample is subjected to an additional regional selection criterion - having an origin in East- or Central Anatolian provinces in Turkey or the former Spanish protectorate in Morocco. The sample was drawn from online telephone directories using onomastic methods. Mobile phone numbers were included as much as possible. In total, nearly 9,000 completed surveys were collected (3,373 native; 3,344 Turkish origin; 2,204 Moroccan origin). This paper discusses the research design, challenges in data collection, and response rates. It also presents the questionnaires and sources of context data.

Suggested Citation

  • Ersanilli, Evelyn & Koopmans, Ruud, 2013. "The Six Country Immigrant Integration Comparative Survey (SCIICS): Technical report," Discussion Papers, Research Unit: Migration, Integration, Transnationalization SP VI 2013-102, WZB Berlin Social Science Center.
  • Handle: RePEc:zbw:wzbmit:spvi2013102
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    File URL: https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/80345/1/756598168.pdf
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    Cited by:

    1. Koopmans, Ruud, 2014. "Religious fundamentalism and out-group hostility among Muslims and Christians in Western Europe," Discussion Papers, Research Unit: Migration, Integration, Transnationalization SP VI 2014-101, WZB Berlin Social Science Center.
    2. Jutta Hoehne & Ines Michalowski, 2016. "Long-Term Effects of Language Course Timing on Language Acquisition and Social Contacts: Turkish and Moroccan Immigrants in Western Europe," International Migration Review, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 50(1), pages 133-162, March.
    3. Anatolie Coșciug, 2018. "Measuring integration in new countries of immigration," Social Change Review, Sciendo, vol. 16(1-2), pages 93-121, December.
    4. Martin Aranguren & Francesco Madrisotti & Eser Durmaz-Martins & Gernot Gerger & Lena Wittmann & Marc Méhu, 2021. "Responses to the Islamic headscarf in everyday interactions depend on sex and locale: A field experiment in the metros of Brussels, Paris, and Vienna on helping and involvement behaviors," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 16(7), pages 1-29, July.

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