Construction, Validation and Application of the Measurement of Social Cohesion in 47 European Countries and Regions

Paul Dickes, Marie Valentova

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This paper aims to present a theoretically based, multidimensional and comparable measurement of social cohesion, applicable in 47 European countries/regions using the most recent micro-level data of the European Value Study (EVS) from 2008 that build upon the previous research conducted on the EVS data from 1999 covering 33 countries. The analysis is conducted in five steps. In the first part, we create a set of measurable intermediate indicators that correspond to the social cohesion dimensions suggested by the theory. In the second part, we verify whether these indicators empirically corroborate the multidimensional structure of the concept proposed by the theory. The third part examines whether the obtained intermediate indicators of social cohesion form the same constructs across countries and whether they can yield a cross-country equivalent measure of social cohesion. In the fourth step, composite scores of all dimensions of social cohesion are calculated for all analysed countries/regions. The last step shows a practical application of the obtained indices and compares levels of social cohesion in six broader geographical regions of Europe to demonstrate the applicability of the measurement in comparative research.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)827-846
Number of pages23
JournalSocial Indicators Research
Volume113
Issue number3
Early online date1 Jan 2012
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2013

Keywords

  • social cohesion
  • measurement equivalence
  • multidimensional scaling
  • LISREL
  • composite indicators

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