702
Views
13
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

The effect of busyness on survey participation: being too busy or feeling too busy to cooperate?

, , &
Pages 357-371 | Received 17 Aug 2012, Accepted 22 Apr 2013, Published online: 28 May 2013

References

  • Abraham, K., Maitland, A., & Bianchi, S. (2006). Nonresponse in the American time use survey: Who is missing from the data and how much does it matter? Public Opinion Quarterly, 70, 676–703.
  • Administratie Planning en Statistiek [Research Centre of the Government of Flanders] (2002). Survey naar Sociaal-culturele verschuivingen in Vlaanderen 2002 [Survey socio-cultural changes in the Flemish region and in Brussels]. Brussels: Administratie Planning en Statistiek. Ministerie van de Vlaamse Gemeenschap [Research Centre of the Government of Flanders].
  • Bethlehem, J., & Kersten, H. (1985). On the treatment of nonresponse in sample surveys. Journal of Official Statistics, 1, 287–300.
  • Billiet, J., Phillipens, M., Fitzgerald, R., & Stoop, I. (2007). Estimation of nonresponse bias in the European social survey: Using information from reluctant respondents. Journal of Official Statistics, 23, 135–162.
  • Carton, A. (2008). Are our paradata always of good quality? Paper presented at the19th International Workshop on Household Survey Nonresponse 2008, September 15–17, Ljubljana (Slovenia).
  • Carton, A., Hegemann, L., & Van Geel, H. (2002). Basisdocumentatie Survey Sociaal-culturele verschuivingen in Vlaanderen [Methodological report of survey socio-cultural changes in the flemish region and in Brussels 2002]. Brussel: Ministerie van de Vlaamse Gemeenschap, administratie Planning en Statistiek.
  • Carton, A., Van Geel, H., & De Pelsemaeker, S. (2005). Basisdocumentatie. Sociaal-culturele verschuivingen in Vlaanderen 2004 [Methodological report of survey socio-cultural changes in the Flemish region and in Brussels 2004]. Brussel: Ministerie van de Vlaamse Gemeenschap, Administratie Planning en Statistiek (APS).
  • Curtin, R., Presser, S., & Singer, E. (2005). Changes in telephone survey nonresponse over the past quarter century. Public Opinion Quarterly, 69, 87–98.
  • de Leeuw, E., & de Heer, W. (2002). Trends in household survey nonresponse: A Longitudinal and international comparison. In R. Groves, D. Dillman, J. Eltinge, J. Roderick, & A. Little (Eds.), Survey nonresponse (pp. 41–54). New York, NY: Wiley.
  • Drago, R., Caplan, R., Costanza, D., Brubaker, T., Cloud, D., Donohue, S., Harris, N., & Riggs, T. (1998). Time for surveys: Do busy people complete time diaries? Society and Leisure, 21, 555–562.
  • Eby, L., Casper, W., Lockwood, A., Bordeaux, C., & Brinley, A. (2005). Work and family research in IO/OB: Content analysis and review of the literature (1980–2002). Journal of Vocational Behavior, 66, 124–197.
  • Ford, M., Heinen, B., & Langkamer, K. (2007). Work and family satisfaction and conflict: A meta-analysis of cross-domain relations. Journal of Applied Psychology, 92, 57–80.
  • Frone, M. R., Yardley, J. K., & Markel, K. S. (1997). Developing and testing an integrative model of the work-family interface. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 50, 145–167.
  • Gershuny, J. (2005). Busyness as the badge of honour for the new superordinate working class. Social Research, 72, 287–315.
  • Goyder, J. (1987). The silent minority: Nonrespondents on sample surveys. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • Groves, R. (2006). Nonresponse rates and nonresponse bias in household surveys. Public Opinion Quarterly, 70, 646–675.
  • Groves, R., & Couper, M. (1998). Nonresponse in household interview surveys. New York, NY: Wiley.
  • Groves, R., Dilman, D., Eltinge, J., & Little, R. (2002). Survey nonresponse. New York, NY: John Wiley.
  • Hochschild, A. (1997). The time bind: When work becomes home and home becomes work. New York, NY: Henry Holt.
  • Höge, T. (2009). When work strain transcends psycho logical boundaries: An inquiry into the relationship between time pressure, irritation, work-family conflict and psychosomatic complaints. Stress and Health, 25, 41–51.
  • Hox, J., de Leeuw, E., & Vorst, H. (1995). Survey participation as reasoned action: A behavioral paradigm for survey nonresponse. Bulletin de Méthodologie Sociologique, 48, 52–67.
  • ISSP (2002). Codebook Family and changing gender roles III. Retrieved from http://www.issp-orgwww
  • Jabkowski, P. (2011). Do more contact-attempts reduce non-response bias in representative face-to-face interviews? Findings from a PAPI survey with a low response rate. ASK Research & Methods, 20, 27–58.
  • Jacobs, J., & Gerson, K. (1998). Who are the overworked Americans? Review of Social Economy, 56, 442–459.
  • Knulst, W., & van den Broeck, A. (1998). Do time-use surveys succeed in measuring ‘busyness’? The Dutch case. Society and Leisure, 21, 563–572.
  • Kreuter, F., Olson, K., Wagner, J., Yan, T., Ezzati-Rice, T. M., Casas-Cordero, C., … Raghunathan, T. E. (2010). Using proxy measures and other correlates of survey outcomes to adjust for non-response: Examples from multiple surveys. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A, 173, 389–407.
  • Laurie, H., Smith, R., & Scott, L. (1999). Strategies for reducing nonresponse in a longitudinal panel survey. Journal of Official Statistics, 15, 269–282.
  • Lin, I., & Schaeffer, N. (1995). Using survey participants to estimate the impact of nonparticipation. Public opinion quarterly, 59, 236–258.
  • Lynn, P. (2003). PEDAKSI: Methodology for collecting data about survey non-respondents. Quality and Quantity, 37, 239–261.
  • Lynn, P., & Clarke, P. (2002). Separating refusal bias and non-contact bias: Evidence from UK national surveys. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series D (The Statistician), 51, 319–333.
  • Maitland, A., Casas-Cordero, C., & Kreuter, F. (2009). An evaluation of nonresponse bias using paradata from a health survey. Paper presented at the 2009 Joint Statistical Meetings of the American Statistical Association, Washington, DC.
  • Mattingly, M., & Sayer, L. (2006). Under pressure: Gender differences in the relationship between free time and feeling rushed. Journal of Marriage and Family, 68, 205–221.
  • Maynard, D., & Schaeffer, N. (1997). Keeping the gate: Declinations of the request to participate in a telephone survey interview. Sociological Methods and Research, 26, 34–79.
  • Milkie, M., Mattingly, M., Nomaguchi, K., Bianchi, S., & Robinson, J. (2004). The time squeeze: Parental status and feelings about time with children. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 66, 739–761.
  • Pääkkönen, H. (1998). Are busy people under- or over-represented in national time budget studies? Society and leisure, 21, 573–582.
  • Peytchev, A. (2011). Breakoff and unit nonresponse across web surveys. Journal of Official Statistics, 27, 33–47.
  • Robinson, J. (1998). Activity patterns of time-diary dropouts. Society and leisure, 21, 551–554.
  • Robinson, J., & Godbey, G. (1997). Time for life: The surprising ways in which Americans use their time. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press.
  • Robinson, J., & Godbey, G. (2005a). Busyness as usual. Social Research, 72, 407–426.
  • Robinson, J., & Godbey, G. (2005b). Time on our hands. Futurist, 39, 18–22.
  • Rogelberg, S. G., & Luong, A. (1998). Nonresponse to mailed surveys: A review and guide. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 7, 60–65.
  • Roose, H., Lievens, J., & Waege, H. (2007). The joint effect of topic interest and follow-up procedures on the response in a mail questionnaire: An empirical test of the leverage-saliency theory in audience research. Sociological Methods & Research, 35, 410–428.
  • Roose, H., Waege, H., & Agneessens, F. (2003). Respondent related correlates of response behaviour in audience research. Quality & Quantity, 37, 411–434.
  • Somech, A., & Drach-Zahavy, A. (2007). Strategies for coping with work-family conflict: The distinctive relationships of gender role ideology. Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 12, 1–19.
  • Stoop, I. (2005). The Hunt for the last respondent. The Hague: Social and Cultural Office of the Netherlands.
  • Stoop, I. (2007). No time, too busy: Time strain and survey cooperation. In G. Loosveldt, M. Swyngedouw, & B. Cambré (Eds.), Measuring meaningful data in social research (pp. 301–314). Leuven: Acco.
  • Symoens, S., & Bracke, P. (2007). Balanceren op de scheidingslijn tussen werk en gezin. Werk-gezin conflict en tevredenheid in Vlaanderen en andere Westerse landen [Balancing on the verge between work and family. Work-family conflict and satisfaction in Flanders and other Western countries]. In J. Pickery (Ed.), Vlaanderen gepeild! 2007 [Flanders examined! 2007] (pp. 262–297). Brussel: Studiedienst van de Vlaamse Regering.
  • van der Lippe, T., Jager, A., & Kops, Y. (2006). Combination pressure. The paid work-family balance of men and women in European countries. Acta Sociologica, 49, 303–319.
  • Van Ingen, E., Stoop, I., & Breedveld, K. (2009). Nonresponse in the Dutch time use survey: Strategies for response enhancement and bias reduction. Field Methods, 21, 69–90.
  • Vercruyssen, A., Roose, H., & Van de Putte, B. (2011). Underestimating busyness: Indications of nonresponse bias due to work-family conflict and time pressure. Social Science Research, 40, 1691–1701.
  • Vercruyssen, A., Van de Putte, B., & Stoop, I. (2011). Are they really too busy for survey participation? The evolution of busyness and busyness claims in Flanders. Journal of Official Statistics, 27, 619–632.
  • Winslow, S. (2005). Work-family conflict, gender and parenthood, 1977–1997. Journal of Family Issues, 26, 727–755.
  • Zuzanek, J. (2004). Work, leisure, time-pressure and stress. In T. Haworth, & A. Veal (Eds.), Work and Leisure (pp. 123–144). London: Routledge.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.