Round 3 of monthly Community Perception Survey of 1400 respondents in 14 priority affected districts of Nepal, post-earthquake. The data is collected by Accountability Lab and Local Interventions Group, as part of the Inter Agency Common Feedback Project, which aims to capture and represent the perceptions of earthquake affected communities within the response and recovery effort.
Round 2 of monthly Community Perception Survey of 1400 respondents in 14 priority affected districts of Nepal, post-earthquake. The data is collected by Accountability Lab and Local Interventions Group, as part of the Inter Agency Common Feedback Project, which aims to capture and represent the perceptions of earthquake affected communities within the response and recovery effort.
Greece-Thessaloniki profiling exercise of urban/out-of-camp Refugees, Asylum Seekers and Third country nationals with data collected July 2018 (report published December 2019). The exercise included a household survey administered to a sample of 641 households of six boroughs of the Thessaloniki Municipality and the surrounding Municipalities including residents of the open facility of Diavata. Data was processed and anonymized with recoding and local suppressions.
Sudan-El Fasher profiling exercise of urban/out-of-camp IDPs and host communities with data collected July 2018 (report published December 2019). The exercise included a household survey administered to a sample of 3,000 households in the urban and peri urban areas of El Fasher, Abu Shouk Camp and El Salam Camp. Data was processed and anonymized with recoding and local suppressions.
The Humanitarian Situation Overview Syria (HSOS) project, formerly known as the Area of Origin (AoO) project, conducts direct data collection using a Key Informant (KI) methodology at the community (village/neighbourhood) level in northwest Syria (3-6 key informants and one form submitted per community). The overall objective of the project is to improve humanitarian access to information on needs and the general humanitarian situation across northwest Syria to help inform aid planning and enhance the understanding of the humanitarian context within Syria.
The coverage spans 1,051 communities across Idleb, Aleppo, and northern Hama. Face-to-face interviews are conducted when possible, otherwise they are done remotely (via phone using enumerators' KI networks in assessed locations). Once primary data is collected and cleaned, it is then triangulated with available secondary data sources (including other REACH products, relevant humanitarian publications by partners and other actors, and reliable news sources).
Data collected in Bangladesh between June-July, 2018. Their analysis contributed to the Xchange Foundation's “The Rohingya Amongst Us”: Bangladeshi Perspectives on the Rohingya Crisis Survey.
The survey sample consisted of 1,697 Bangladeshi adults living in Teknaf (56%) and Ukhia (44%), the two southernmost subdistricts of Cox’s Bazar, and home to the majority of the Rohingya population. The survey was conducted in Bengali with the use of a questionnaire distributed through an online data collection application across more than 71 (up to 97) villages. Respondents were provided with anonymity and verbal consent was ensured before proceeding with each survey. The results of the survey are generalisable to the total adult Bangladeshi population residing in Ukhia and Teknaf upazilas (on a 95% confidence level, the margin of sampling error was 2.37).
To read the full report go to: Link
This is Internews data collected by GeoPoll in Liberia during the Ebola crisis. The data refers to an Information Needs Assessment done in between February 2015 and July 2015.
Within 24 hours of the World Health Organization declaring the Zika virus a global health emergency, RIWI began a study in 9 countries across the Americas capturing over 30,000 respondents. Data collection targeted respondents' knowledge of Zika virus transmission mechanisms and confidence in government health agencies to treat and contain the epidemic. The data was collected using RIWI's patented Random Domain Intercept Technology™ (RDIT).
This data is collected from the survey conducted in 14 earthquake affected district in Nepal in May 2017. Total of 2100 respondent were interviewed.
All VDCs in the 14 priority affected districts in which 60 percent or more of the households are eligible for the housing reconstruction grant will be considered part of the survey’s operating area, and eligible for random selection. The population of each district will be considered the total population of all eligible VDCs, as per the 2011 census. The first 2000 samples of the survey will then be distributed by district proportionally.
The remaining 100 surveys will be allocated to districts where the total proportional sample size is under 100 respondents, in order to boost the population for an adequate district level analysis of the findings. The number of VDCs selected in each district will vary, depending upon the number of samples allocated to each district. Each VDC will have a minimum of two wards sampled, and each ward a minimum of 10
surveys completed. Both VDCs and wards will be randomly selected from the list of eligible VDCs. Twenty-ve percent of the total sample will be allocated for municipalities, and municipalities will be randomly selected where there is more than one municipality in a district. In municipalities a minimum of three wards will be sampled, with a minimum of 10 surveys collected per ward
In 2014, RIWI Corp. launched an online survey in Nigeria, Liberia, and Sierra Leone capturing public perceptions data from over 4,000 respondents on the status of Ebola in those countries. Respondents were asked a series of questions related to their confidence in government and aid agencies to manage the Ebola outbreak, as well as their own behavioral response to the infection. The data was collected using RIWI's patented Random Domain Intercept Technology™ (RDIT).
The data was collected in the most affected areas by Internews staff and partners organizations to look at the aftermath of Hurricane Matthew and the perceptions that beneficiaries had of the response overall.
Round 6 of monthly Community Perception Survey of 1400 respondents in 14 priority affected districts of Nepal, post-earthquake. The data is collected by Accountability Lab and Local Interventions Group, as part of the Inter Agency Common Feedback Project, which aims to capture and represent the perceptions of earthquake affected communities within the response and recovery effort.
Round 5 of monthly Community Perception Survey of 1400 respondents in 14 priority affected districts of Nepal, post-earthquake. The data is collected by Accountability Lab and Local Interventions Group, as part of the Inter Agency Common Feedback Project, which aims to capture and represent the perceptions of earthquake affected communities within the response and recovery effort.
Maisha is VoicesAfrica’s online pan Africa study on lifestyle and viewpoints on various aspects of life. The research report covers the following information areas:
Income and expenditure
• If earn a personal income
• Share of wallet
• Whether overall expenditure has gone up, down, or remained the same compared to the previous year
Values
• Determinants of well being
• Aspects that have made life better/worse
• Threats to self and country
Role models
• Most admired personality
• Part of the world/Africa that offers greatest inspiration and hope
Africa unity
• If would support the integration of all African countries
Technology
• Devices used
• Device that has made life better/worse
• Device that has had greatest influence in life
Attitudes
• Response to statements on politics, insecurity, family, religion, sports, patriotism, economy, corruption, health, relationships, among others
Round 4 of monthly Community Perception Survey of 1400 respondents in 14 priority affected districts of Nepal, post-earthquake. The data is collected by Accountability Lab and Local Interventions Group, as part of the Inter Agency Common Feedback Project, which aims to capture and represent the perceptions of earthquake affected communities within the response and recovery effort.