Support #1282
open
ISCO-88 derived classification
Added by C Josten about 5 years ago.
Updated over 2 years ago.
Category:
Questionnaire content
Description
Hi Stephanie!
Thanks for answering my previous question. Additionally, I'd be interested to know if there is an overview over how the three-digit ISCO-88 classification was constructed (Variable: jlisco88. I understand that it follows the classic ISCO-88 definition but I am puzzled regarding the values 10, 11 and 200 who do not seem to fit into the standard classification to my knowledge.
Thanks and kind regards,
C.
- Status changed from New to In Progress
- Assignee changed from Stephanie Auty to C Josten
- % Done changed from 0 to 10
- Private changed from Yes to No
Dear C,
Could you tell me which waves you are looking at? I can see a code of 10 in UKHLS datasets but not the other codes you mention.
Best wishes,
Stephanie
Hi Stephanie,
thanks for getting back. The code 200 and the code 11 both appear in the BHPS in wave 1 and 9. The code 10 appears in Understanding society in wave 1 and 2.
Thanks and best wishes,
C
- Assignee changed from C Josten to Stephanie Auty
Thanks, I will get back to you when I have an answer.
Best wishes,
Stephanie
- Status changed from In Progress to Feedback
- Assignee changed from Stephanie Auty to C Josten
- % Done changed from 10 to 80
Dear C,
THe coding for those variables in these waves was done by our fieldwork agencies at the time. The 11 and 200 codes will be because the job was not codeable at a lower level, so 11 refers to legstlators and senior officials, and 200 to professionals: https://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/isco/isco88/major.htm
The 10 code will be related to inconsistencies or being mistaken for a missing value if coded as 0, and this refers to armed forces.
Best wishes,
Stephanie
- Category set to Questionnaire content
- Status changed from Feedback to Resolved
- Assignee deleted (
C Josten)
- % Done changed from 80 to 100
Also available in: Atom
PDF