Article

Scottish Social Survey Data, Past, Present and Future – Does Scotland Need its Own Data Strategy?

Details

Citation

Gayle V, Playford C & Lambert P (2008) Scottish Social Survey Data, Past, Present and Future – Does Scotland Need its Own Data Strategy?. Radical Statistics, 97, pp. 82-97. http://www.radstats.org.uk/no097/index.htm

Abstract
The UK now has a National Data Strategy. In this paper we explore whether or not in addition Scotland needs its own specific data strategy. This paper is intended to be a ‘think piece’ or critical essay, the motivation being to encourage debate about Scottish social survey data. Post-devolution, with the emergence of new forms of governance and new institutional arrangements, the political desire to research Scotland in the 21st Century has been brought into sharper resolution. Social and economic life in Scotland shares both similarities and differences with life south of the border. It is important that these characteristics are correctly identified with empirical data rather than simply being assumed. Scotland is a small territory with a good social science tradition and a healthy research sector. There is an increasing amount of survey data collecting measures relating to social and economic life in Scotland. These include both United Kingdom or Great Britain based surveys with a Scottish component, and Scotland focussed surveys. In this paper we outline a number of key issues relating to Scottish social science data resources. We provide a number of critical recommendations for social science data collection in Scotland. Finally, we examine the potential benefits of a comprehensive data strategy.

Keywords
Scotland Data; Scottish Data Strategy; Scottish Data Resources; Scotland Statistics; Information storage and retrieval systems Law Great Britain

Journal
Radical Statistics: Volume 97

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2008
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/1733
PublisherRadical Statistics Group
Publisher URLhttp://www.radstats.org.uk/no097/index.htm
ISSN0268-6376

People (1)

Professor Paul Lambert

Professor Paul Lambert

Professor, Sociology, Social Policy & Criminology

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