Compare methods
Review your selected methods side by side; rows that differ are highlighted.
| Anthropological Household Survey× | Time Allocation Study× | |
|---|---|---|
| Field | Anthropology | Anthropology |
| Family | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Year of origin≠ | 2017 | 1984 |
| Originator≠ | Survey-research tradition adapted to community fieldwork (Bernard) | Ecological and economic anthropology (synthesized by Gross) |
| Type≠ | Structured survey design taking the household as the unit of analysis | Research design for characterizing how people allocate time across activities |
| Seminal source≠ | Bernard, H. R. (2017). Research Methods in Anthropology: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches (6th ed.). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN: 9780759112421 | Gross, D. R. (1984). Time allocation: a tool for the study of cultural behavior. Annual Review of Anthropology, 13, 519–558. DOI ↗ |
| Aliases | Household Census, Community Household Survey, Household Economic Survey, Household Roster Survey | Time Allocation Research, Time Use Study, Time Budget Study, Activity Allocation Study |
| Related | 4 | 4 |
| Summary≠ | An anthropological household survey is a structured or semi-structured, census-style instrument administered to the households of a community to record their composition, economy, and assets in a standardized form. Taking the household rather than the individual as the unit of analysis, it captures who lives together, how they are related, what they own and produce, and how they make a living. Whether applied as a full census of every household or to a representative sample, it turns the texture of community life into comparable, aggregable data that complement participant observation. | A time-allocation study is an anthropological research design that measures how people distribute their time across the activities of daily life — subsistence, domestic work, child care, leisure, ritual, and rest — in order to characterize a community's economy and way of life quantitatively. Data are gathered by directly observing what people do (through random spot checks or continuous focal observation) or by collecting recall diaries, and the activities are then expressed as shares of the total time budget. The result is an empirical portrait of how labor and leisure are organized and divided. |
| ScholarGateDataset ↗ |
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