This book addresses the disparities that arise when measuring and modeling societal behavior and progress across the social sciences. It looks at why and how different disciplines and even researchers can use the same data and yet come to different conclusions about equality of opportunity, economic and social mobility, poverty and polarization, and conflict and segregation. Because societal behavior and progress exist only in the context of other key aspects, modeling becomes exponentially more complex as more of these aspects are factored into considerations. The content of this book transcends disciplinary boundaries, providing valuable information on measuring and modeling to economists, sociologists, and political scientists who are interested in data-based analysis of pressing social issues.
Author(s): Gordon Anderson
Series: Global Perspectives On Wealth And Distribution
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 220
Tags: Labor Economics, Multilateral Wellbeing
Front Matter ....Pages i-xx
Measuring the Wellbeing of Groups (Gordon Anderson)....Pages 1-21
Statistical Matters (Gordon Anderson)....Pages 23-60
Complete Orderings: Index Types and the Ambiguity Problem (Gordon Anderson)....Pages 61-95
Partial Orderings (Gordon Anderson)....Pages 97-134
Comparing Latent Subgroups (Gordon Anderson)....Pages 135-151
Ambiguity, Comparability, Segmentation and All That (Gordon Anderson)....Pages 153-180
Some Applications (Gordon Anderson)....Pages 181-202
Back Matter ....Pages 203-205