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Linking lives through time THE VALUE OF LONGITUDINAL RESEARCH IN POPULATION GEOGRAPHY Paul Boyle...

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linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk THE VALUE OF LONGITUDINAL RESEARCH IN POPULATION GEOGRAPHY Paul Boyle (Tom Cooke, Zhiqiang Feng, Vernon Gayle, Elspeth Graham, Hill Kulu, Paul Norman, Clive Sabel) linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk
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linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

THE VALUE OF LONGITUDINAL RESEARCH IN POPULATION

GEOGRAPHY

Paul Boyle

(Tom Cooke, Zhiqiang Feng, Vernon Gayle, Elspeth Graham, Hill Kulu, Paul Norman, Clive Sabel)

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

As more engage with the cultural turn there is a risk that Geography becomes detached from important social issues and concerns

While Population Geography is regarded as a quantitatively strong sub-discipline in Geography, it is weak compared to other disciplines – we face a critical time ahead

Longitudinal data – Population Geographers need to make better use of existing resources

Longitudinal methods – exciting possibilities for a quantitative Population Geography of the future

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Theoretically advanced

research

Theoretically weak research

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Theoretically advanced

research

Theoretically weak research

Weak research methods

Advanced research methods

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Theoretically advanced

research

Theoretically weak research

Weak research methods

Advanced research methods

Population Geography?

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Quantitative research in Geography

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

It has been argued that an unhealthy divide has developed within the discipline of Geography

Geography is gradually ignoring important social questions for which quantitative analysis is particularly pertinent

The focus on qualitative methods may have gone too far?

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

“ the rise of a post-modern human geography, with its stress on textuality and texts, deconstruction, critique, reading and interpretation, has led human geography into a theoretical playground where its practitioners stimulate or entertain themselves and a handful of readers, but have in the process become increasingly detached from contemporary social issues and concerns.”

Hamnett (2003: 1)

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

“ there has been a radical shift in the dominant methodology of much human geographical research. Quantitative techniques and aggregate social research have been largely abandoned, in favour of small scale, interpretative, qualitative, in-depth methodologies. Analysis of large data sets has become totally passe, the object of suspicion or even derision as empiricist. Arguably, methodological development has been characterised by a shift from much mindless quantification and measurement to an unquestioning use of qualitative techniques.” (Hamnett 2003: 2)

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“ The risk is that much of human geography will cease to be taken seriously in the world beyond the narrow confines of academe. It will be seen simply as a corner of the postmodern theoretical playground, possibly entertaining to study for a while, but something which can be safely ignored while the grown ups get on with the business of changing the world, often for the worse.”

Hamnett (2003: 1)

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Of course, the extent of this problem is debated

Some suggest that quantitative research remains strong in Geography, especially in Population Geography

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

“ we strongly take issue with his view that quantitative techniques and aggregate social research have been largely abandoned and that geographers no longer analyse large data sets. Indeed such work remains a buoyant component of the contemporary discipline, characterised by much sophisticated analysis of data sets large and small––certainly not mindless quantification and measurement but rather an ordered interrogation.”

Johnston et al. (2003: 157)

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However, while some geographers may continue to use quantitative analysis, few are engaging with longitudinal data

Geographers are failing to take advantage of these ‘jewels in the crown’

Even fewer are adopting sophisticated longitudinal modelling approaches

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

October 2003 –September 2004, 839 cohort data sets downloaded from the archive (346 users)

cohort

NCDS

BCS70

NCDS & BCS70

MCS

Datasets downloaded

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Other

Applied social research

Business and management

Health & epidemiology

Applied statistics and maths

Economics

Government departments

Data library service

Psychology

Education

paediatrics and development

Sociology, social policy etc

Geography

CLS

missing

discipline

0 20 40 60 80 100

Count

Disciplines of individuals downloading datasets

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

There are few quantitatively trained young Population Geography researchers

Despite ESRC’s strong emphasis on the training of quantitative researchers • Various training for early- or mid-career

researchers• PhD students get extra £3000 for

quantitative techniques• Aiming to influence training in undergraduate

degrees

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

The value of longitudinal

methods

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Cross-sectional data• Single point in time• Pooling cross-sectional surveys to examine

change through time (e.g. GHS)• Measures aggregate, not individual, change

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Longitudinal data• Multiple points in time• Panel study with repeated measurements

(e.g. BHPS)• Cohort studies chart the development of

groups from a particular time point (e.g. birth cohorts)

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

The value of longitudinal data analysis• Permits insights into the processes of

change (mobilities and transitions)• Age, period and cohort effects• Direction of causality • State dependence• Residual heterogeneity

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Age 16 17 18 19 20 21 (Cohort 1)

Age 16 17 18 19 (Cohort 2)

Age 16 17 (Cohort 3)

Age Period Cohort

Age, period, cohort effects

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Cross-sectional data show that the unemployed have poorer health than the employed, but what is the direction of effect?

Unemployment Poor health

Unemployment Poor health

Direction of causality

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

“ As far as I'm concerned I'm in good shape. I still love my football. I'm not retiring and my leaving is in no way health related.”

(Houllier, May 2004)

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Person A Person B

Month Health status Employment status

Health status Employment status

1 17 Employed

2 1 Employed

3 1 Employed

4 1 Unemployed

5 1 Unemployed

6 1 Unemployed

7 1 Unemployed

8 1 Unemployed

9 1 Unemployed

10 1 Unemployed

11 1 Unemployed

12 1 Unemployed

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Person A Person B

Month Health status Employment status

Health status Employment status

1 17 Employed 17 Employed

2 1 Employed 17 Employed

3 1 Employed 17 Employed

4 1 Unemployed 17 Unemployed

5 1 Unemployed 17 Unemployed

6 1 Unemployed 10 Unemployed

7 1 Unemployed 16 Unemployed

8 1 Unemployed 5 Unemployed

9 1 Unemployed 4 Unemployed

10 1 Unemployed 3 Unemployed

11 1 Unemployed 2 Unemployed

12 1 Unemployed 1 Unemployed

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Person A Person B

Month Health status Employment status

Health status Employment status

1 17 Employed 17 Employed

2 1 Employed 17 Employed

3 1 Employed 17 Employed

4 1 Unemployed 17 Unemployed

5 1 Unemployed 17 Unemployed

6 1 Unemployed 10 Unemployed

7 1 Unemployed 16 Unemployed

8 1 Unemployed 5 Unemployed

9 1 Unemployed 4 Unemployed

10 1 Unemployed 3 Unemployed

11 1 Unemployed 2 Unemployed

12 1 Unemployed 1 Unemployed

Person A unemployed for 9 months, health score 1Person B unemployed for 9 months, health score 1

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Person A Person B

Month Health status Employment status

Health status Employment status

1 17 Employed 17 Employed

2 1 Employed 17 Employed

3 1 Employed 17 Employed

4 1 Unemployed 17 Unemployed

5 1 Unemployed 17 Unemployed

6 1 Unemployed 10 Unemployed

7 1 Unemployed 16 Unemployed

8 1 Unemployed 5 Unemployed

9 1 Unemployed 4 Unemployed

10 1 Unemployed 3 Unemployed

11 1 Unemployed 2 Unemployed

12 1 Unemployed 1 Unemployed

Person A unemployed for 9 months, health score 1Person B unemployed for 9 months, health score 1

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

State dependence

Past behaviour Current behaviour

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

State dependence

Unemployed, t-1 Unemployed, t?

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

State dependence

Unemployed, t-1

Employed, t-1

Unemployed, t?

?

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Residual heterogeneity

The possibility of substantial variation between similar individuals due to unmeasured or unmeasurable variables• Data collection instruments fail to capture the

full complexity of social life• No way of accounting for omitted explanatory

variables in cross-sectional analysis• Techniques exist for accounting for omitted

explanatory variables if we have data for an individual at more than one time point

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Making better use of the data

we already have

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

The UK has a wealth of longitudinal data

Considerable value in routinely collected administrative data

An under-utilised resource, which has been yet to be properly and consistently harnessed

Relatively cheap and, often, comprehensive in coverage

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

For many reasons, the public are rightly apprehensive about the general erosion of privacy of information• Surveillance society…• Identity cards…• Identity theft…• Use of DNA material…• Links to insurance cover…

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

protection of people’s privacy …

versus

… creation of bona fide and valuable knowledge about

population and society

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Lawrence Gostin 2000 Public Health Law (University of California Press)

“ Despite my background as a civil libertarian... I question the primacy of individual freedom (and its associated concepts – autonomy, privacy, and liberty) as the prevailing social norm. Freedom is a powerful and important idea, but I think scholars have given insufficient attention to equally strong values that are captured by the notions of partnership, citizenship, and community....”

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

26th June 2006

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

19th June 2007

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

We should adopt a culture of data sharing (ESRC are leading the way)

Carefully controlled settings can provide access to data in imaginative ways

Linking data is not risky if careful procedures for data access are in place• Safe settings• Remote access• Special license

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

The Scottish Longitudinal

Study

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Modelled on England and Wales LS Provides linked data from the Scottish

Census and administrative records Sampling based on 20 ‘semi-random’

birthdays (5.5% of the Scottish population)

Initial sample drawn from the 1991 Census (around 274,000 members)

Similar sample drawn from 2001 Census Link vital events information in the

intervening period

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Data sources Vital statistics

• Births (SLS birthdate)• Births (to sample

members)• Stillbirths• Infant mortality• Deaths• Widow(er)hoods• Divorces

Health data• Cancer registrations

Census• 1991 Census, 2001 Census• Including data on occupation,

economic activity, social class, housing, ethnicity, age, sex, marital status, household composition, health, education, country of birth, migration, workplace, religion etc.

• Information on SLS member and other household members

Population data• Immigration• Emigration

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Data sources Vital statistics

• Births (SLS birthdate)• Births (to sample

members)• Stillbirths• Infant mortality• Deaths• Widow(er)hoods• Divorces• Marriages

Health data• Cancer registrations• Hospital episodes

Census• 1991 Census, 2001 Census• Including data on occupation,

economic activity, social class, housing, ethnicity, age, sex, marital status, household composition, health, education, country of birth, migration, workplace, religion etc.

• Information on SLS member and other household members

Population data• Immigration• Emigration

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

The future…?

Linkage of additional data…• Educational data (school census and exam

results)• Small-area geographical estimates of

income and health-related behaviours• And the exciting opportunity to link back

through time

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

The SLS and datasets like it have great potential for population geographers

The large sample allows better geographical resolution

The integration of census and vital events information is particularly relevant to topics in Population Geography

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Research 1:MND in Finland

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Motor Neurone Disease in Finland, 1985-1995

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Genetic or environmental influences?

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Died

Middle

Born

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Cases Controls

Stayed

Moved away

102

122

82

137

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Research 2:Suburban fertility

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Distinct clusters of low and high fertility, in urban centres and suburban surrounds

Why is fertility higher in suburban areas?

Suburban compositional, contextual or selective migration effects?

Explore Finnish fertility histories…

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Research 3:Migration and

health

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Health

Migration Deprivation

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Health

Migration Deprivation

• There is a deprivation gradient for health status

• Healthy people live in less deprived locations and vice versa

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

• Healthy are more likely to migrate than unhealthy

• Unhealthy elderly are more likely to migrate than healthy

Health

Migration Deprivation

• There is a deprivation gradient for health status

• Healthy people live in less deprived locations and vice versa

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

• Healthy are more likely to migrate than unhealthy

• Unhealthy elderly are more likely to migrate than healthy

• More advantaged people tend to migrate towards less deprived locations?

• Less advantaged people tend to drift into (or be trapped in) the more deprived locations?

Health

Migration Deprivation

• There is a deprivation gradient for health status

• Healthy people live in less deprived locations and vice versa

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Age standardised rates of limiting long-term illness: total population

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Age standardised rates of limiting long-term illness: all migrants

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Age standardised rates of limiting long-term illness: long-distance migrants

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Limiting long-term illness

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

Conclusion

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

A criticism of Population Geography is that it has not been swept up in the cultural turn as much as other sub-disciplines within Geography

For some, this may be a strength

Yet, while Population Geography has retained a quantitative tradition, these skills are gradually disappearing

linking lives through time www.lscs.ac.uk

The quantitative skills among Population Geographers are weak compared to other disciplines

We face a critical time ahead

Longitudinal data and methods provide possibilities that Population Geographers should take more advantage of


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