Disasters, Crises, and Unique Populations: Suggestions for Survey Research
Keywords
crisis communication; survey methods; sampling
Abstract
Methodological and data-analysis challenges for evaluators working in disaster and crisis contexts are discussed. Crises are, by definition, unexpected, nonroutine occurrences that create conditions unfavorable to traditional methods of data collection. The inherently novel nature of disasters and large-scale crises, coupled with their unpredictability, often makes data collection difficult at best. Given the methodological limitations imposed by the conditions surrounding disasters, researchers and evaluators are often criticized for methodological decisions concerning data collection, randomization, and generalizability. This chapter addresses issues of data collection, randomization and data analysis in disaster research, outlining the difficulties of randomization, problems stemming from the absence of randomization, and potential solutions to these problems.
Date Created
January 2010
STARS Citation
Spence, Patric and Lachlan, Kenneth, "Disasters, Crises, and Unique Populations: Suggestions for Survey Research" (2010). EGS Content. 368.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/egs_content/368
https://works.bepress.com/patric-spence/26/download/