We will make available to the behavioral and social science research community an already existing longitudinal, individual-level dataset, the China Multi-Generational Panel Dataset - Shuangcheng (CMGPD- SC). The CMGPD-SC includes 1,346,829 person-year observations of 108,100 individuals who lived in 125 communities in Shuangcheng county in Heilongjiang province in northeast China between 1855 and 1911. We will also release accompanying land registers that specify landholding in the years 1870, 1876, 1882, 1887, 1889 and 1906. The release of the CMGPD-SC will address an outstanding need for publicly available multi-generational data on individuals and households that measures socioeconomic status not just by income or occupation, but also by wealth. Like the China Multi-Generation Panel Dataset - Liaoning (CMGPD-LN) that we are currently releasing through ICPSR, the CMGPD-SC allows for the assessment of relations of socioeconomic attainment and demographic outcomes such as reproduction, marriage, and mortality to individual, household, and community economic, institutional, geographic, and social context. It supports analysis of interactions between family organization, demographic behavior, and wealth stratification not just over the life course, but across multiple generations. We will release the CMGPD-SC through the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) over 3 years. For release, we will clean the data, link individuals to maternal kin where possible, construct additional variables, and create a Contextual Dataset that describes the villages. We have already completed data entry, linkage of the household and land registers, and linkage of individuals to their paternal kin. The release will be divided into five sections: Basic Dataset, Restricted Dataset, Landholding Dataset, Kinship Dataset, and Contextual Dataset. We will also produce documentation consisting of a User Guide, Source Guide, and Training Guide. We will also engage in outreach to promote use by introducing the data at major professional meetings, creating a website, organizing a Users'Group, and offering a week-long training workshop in year 3 in conjunction with the ICPSR Summer Program.

Public Health Relevance

The public release of this dataset will facilitate research on social, economic, and community influences on health and mortality over the life course and even across generations by making available to the research community a rich multigenerational demographic database organized by community, household, and individual.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01HD070985-01
Application #
8222538
Study Section
Social Sciences and Population Studies Study Section (SSPS)
Program Officer
Clark, Rebecca L
Project Start
2012-05-28
Project End
2015-04-30
Budget Start
2012-05-28
Budget End
2013-04-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2012
Total Cost
$238,523
Indirect Cost
$78,630
Name
University of California Los Angeles
Department
Social Sciences
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
092530369
City
Los Angeles
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90095
Dong, Hao; Campbell, Cameron; Kurosu, Satomi et al. (2015) New Sources for Comparative Social Science: Historical Population Panel Data From East Asia. Demography 52:1061-88
Song, Xi; Campbell, Cameron D; Lee, James Z (2015) Ancestry Matters: Patrilineage Growth and Extinction. Am Sociol Rev 80:574-602