ADA Dataverse (Australian Data Archive)
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The Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health: 1921-26 cohort Core Data Release, Survey 1 data, 1996
The Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH) is a longitudinal population-based survey, first funded in 1995, which examines the health of over 57,000 Australian women. The project was designed to explore factors that influence health among women who are broadly representative of the entire Australian population. ALSWH goes beyond a narrow perspective that equates women's health with reproductive and sexual health, and takes a comprehensive view of all aspects of health throughout women's lifespan. The first survey was conducted in 1996, and covered three groups, the 1973-1978 cohort, the 1946-1951 cohort, and the 1921-1926 cohort. In 2013, a new cohort of young women, aged 18-23 and known as the 1989-95 cohort, were recruited. Each cohort receives different questionnaires, which vary in the types of questions asked, but in essence cover issues regarding overall physical and emotional health, use of health services, education and employment status, drug and/or alcohol use, diet, exercise, and family situation. A detailed description of the background, aims, themes, methods and progress of the study is given on the project web page https://www.alswh.org.au/about/. This particular dataset refers to Survey 1 of the 1921-26 cohort and is a part of the Core Data Release. Some data in this data release were modified to maintain the confidentiality of ALSWH respondents
The Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health: 1989-95 cohort Core Data Release, Survey 1 data, 2013
The Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH) is a longitudinal population-based survey, first funded in 1995, which examines the health of over 57,000 Australian women. The Study explores factors that influence health among women who are broadly representative of the entire Australian population. ALSWH goes beyond a narrow perspective that equates women's health with reproductive and sexual health, and takes a comprehensive view of all aspects of health throughout women's lifespan. This cohort, women born 1989-95, were recruited in 2013. The cohort is regularly (to date, either annually, or biennially) surveyed via an online questionnaire covering issues regarding overall physical and emotional health, use of health services, education and employment status, drug and/or alcohol use, diet, exercise, and family situation. A detailed description of the background, aims, themes, methods and progress of the study is given on the project web page https://www.alswh.org.au/about/. This particular dataset refers to Survey 1 of the cohort and is a part of the Core Data Release. Some data in this data release were modified to maintain the confidentiality of ALSWH respondents
ANU Poll 2020: COVID-19 attitudes and behaviours (longitudinal panel data)
This longitudinal data set includes panel data from the 33rd ANUPoll wave conducted in April (COVID Wave 1), along with a subset of linked data from the January and February waves of the LinA panel data collection. The purpose of the ANU Poll is to assess Australians' opinions on important and topical issues. The COVID wave of the project investigates Australia's experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic. It includes questions regarding hygiene and social distancing measures, mental health and social impacts, and economic impacts of the pandemic. Longitudinal data linked from the January and February waves are also available in this data set. The files include data corresponding to questions on trust in institutions, household structure, the 2019/20 summer bushfires, employment, and mental health.
USER NOTICE: This data set does not include data from May ANUPoll (COVID-19 Wave 2). Please access that data at https://dataverse.ada.edu.au/dataset.xhtml?persistentId=doi:10.26193/GNEHCQ
Medicine in Australia: Balancing Employment and Life (MABEL), Release 11.0
The Medicine in Australia: Balancing Employment and Life (MABEL) study was developed by researchers at the Melbourne Institute: Applied Economic & Social Research at The University of Melbourne and the School of Rural Health at Monash University. This Release 11 of MABEL data should facilitate and enhance the use of the unit record data by researchers, government and other organisations. The data are most useful for national-level analyses of a range of doctors’ attitudes to work, job characteristics, work settings, finances and family circumstances that can be tracked over time
The Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health: 1973-78 cohort Core Data Release, Survey 3 data, 2003
The Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH) is a longitudinal population-based survey, first funded in 1995, which examines the health of over 57,000 Australian women. The project was designed to explore factors that influence health among women who are broadly representative of the entire Australian population. ALSWH goes beyond a narrow perspective that equates women's health with reproductive and sexual health, and takes a comprehensive view of all aspects of health throughout women's lifespan. The first survey was conducted in 1996, and covered three groups, the 1973-1978 cohort, the 1946-1951 cohort, and the 1921-1926 cohort. In 2013, a new cohort of young women, aged 18-23 and known as the 1989-95 cohort, were recruited. Each cohort receives different questionnaires, which vary in the types of questions asked, but in essence cover issues regarding overall physical and emotional health, use of health services, education and employment status, drug and/or alcohol use, diet, exercise, and family situation. A detailed description of the background, aims, themes, methods and progress of the study is given on the project web page https://www.alswh.org.au/about/. This particular dataset refers to Survey 3 of the 1973-78 cohort and is a part of the Core Data Release. Some data in this data release were modified to maintain the confidentiality of ALSWH respondents
Health, Wellbeing and Technology Survey (OPBS replication), 2017
The Social Research Centre administered the questionnaire used for the Online Panels Benchmarking Study, conducted between October and December 2015, to wave 2 of Life in Australia™. This replication study was conducted in January and February 2017 to compare survey estimates generated from Life in Australia™ with those obtained when the same questionnaire is administered to different probability and nonprobability samples. All active panel members at that time were invited to take part in the survey
National Survey of the Family and Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Workforces, Service Leaders Survey, 2017
The National Survey of the Family and Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Workforces, 2017 study involved two surveys, the design and interpretation of which was informed by stakeholder consultations. Two survey instruments were used: (1) a survey of service leaders, which was distributed for completion by a senior staff member responsible for workforce management or workforce development in their service; and (2) a survey of workers. This is the survey of service leaders, which captured experiences of leaders in services used by people affected by violence. It captured their characteristics, and their perspectives on various areas of practice. Questions include levels of contact with people affected by violence in their organisations, their experience and qualifications, employment arrangements, competence in recognising and responding to violence, training and support, supervision, and job quality
Making Futures
Making Futures is a qualitative study of young people’s journeys through the senior years of secondary schooling and into the world beyond. It explores how young people navigate their educational, social and familial worlds, and imagine and work toward their futures. The project seeks to gain insights into perceptions of gender relations and perspectives on diverse forms of social issues and differences. It takes a cross-generational and comparative approach: comparing these young people’s perspectives with their parents’ recollections of their own educational experiences, as well as with those of an earlier generation in a similar study. This data set comprises interview transcripts and project materials. It includes semi-structured life history interviews with senior secondary students and their parents/guardians conducted in 2015-2018. Other data files include project materials such as blank consent forms, blank plain language statements and interview questions, as well as pdfs from the projects website - www.makingfutures.net. Seventy interviews from twenty students and nine parents/guardians were recorded and transcribed. Of these interviews, consent for archiving was given for fifty-four interviews from fourteen students and eight parents/guardians
The Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health: 1946-51 cohort Core Data Release, Survey 1 data, 1996
The Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH) is a longitudinal population-based survey, first funded in 1995, which examines the health of over 57,000 Australian women. The project was designed to explore factors that influence health among women who are broadly representative of the entire Australian population. ALSWH goes beyond a narrow perspective that equates women's health with reproductive and sexual health, and takes a comprehensive view of all aspects of health throughout women's lifespan. The first survey was conducted in 1996, and covered three groups, the 1973-1978 cohort, the 1946-1951 cohort, and the 1921-1926 cohort. In 2013, a new cohort of young women, aged 18-23 and known as the 1989-95 cohort, were recruited. Each cohort receives different questionnaires, which vary in the types of questions asked, but in essence cover issues regarding overall physical and emotional health, use of health services, education and employment status, drug and/or alcohol use, diet, exercise, and family situation. A detailed description of the background, aims, themes, methods and progress of the study is given on the project web page https://www.alswh.org.au/about/. This particular dataset refers to Survey 1 of the 1946-1951 cohort and is a part of the Core Data Release. Some data in this data release were modified to maintain the confidentiality of ALSWH respondents
Western Australia Supreme Court 1862-1899
Trials on indictment at Western Australia Supreme Court, includes data on name of accused, offence, trial date, judge, verdict, sentence and links to Trove (nla.gov.au) digitised newspaper reports. Prior to 1861 serious offences were tried at Courts of Quarter Sessions (for which see the Dataverse collection Western Australia Criminal Trials 1830-1861). During the later part of the nineteenth century very large numbers of Indigenous people were tried at the Supreme Court, often before a Special Commissioner at sittings in northern settlements - this data collection includes a large number of these accused and details of their trial outcomes