Scientific program
9:00 OPENING SPEECH – Bruno Schoumaker
9:15-10:30 SESSION 1: MAKING NEW USE OF UNTAPPED DATA SOURCES (Chair: Ph. Bocquier)
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Parish register microdata in Africa: lessons learned from three experiments in comparing and combining sources
Sarah Walters, Shane Doyle, Johannes Pöhlmann and Sarah Rafferty -
The challenges presented by violent causes
of death in 19th and 21st century Belgium, and the contribution of the
contemporary press
Audrey Plavsic -
Estimating and analyzing historical infant mortality estimates using the colonial Senegalese civil registry
Dinos Sevdalakis, Hilde Bras and Adrien Remund
10:30-10:45 COFFEE BREAK
10:45 – 12:15 SESSION 2: WEB SCRAPING AND ONLINE CROWDSOURCED DATA
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Obituaries as an alternative source of data
Pietro Violo and Nadine Ouellette -
Leveraging online crowdsourced genealogical
data to measure fertility during the historical period 1751- 1900:
evidence from Europe
Riccardo Omenti -
Researching buying medication abortion drugs online via a mystery client study design: A study being conducted in Colombia
Daniel Arango Arango, Ann M. Moore, Ava Braccia and Maria Vivas -
Shared housing and immigrant population in Barcelona: a spatial analysis using web scraping
Carolina Orozco-Martínez, Jordi Bayona-i-Carrasco and Fernando Gil-Alonso
12:15-13:45 LUNCH
13:45-15:30 SESSION 3: INNOVATIVE SAMPLE DESIGNS AND CALCULATIONS (Chair: M. Vergeles)
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A new approach to collecting data from a respondent-driven sample
Casey F. Breen and Dennis M. Feehan -
Using Respondent-Driven Sampling to measure
abortion safety in restrictive contexts: results from the Kaya (Burkina
Faso) and Nairobi (Kenya) Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems
Moussa L. Zan, Onikepe Owolabi, Adama Baguiya, Clement Oduor, Martin Bangha, Caron Kim, Clémentine Rossier and the N-MAS team -
Combining microsimulations and census data to evaluate sample size requirements of parental survival histories
Bruno Masquelier, Ashira Menashe-Oren, Benjamin Samuel-Schlüter, Atoumane Fall and Stéphane Helleringer
15:00-15:15 COFFEE BREAK
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Mobile phone survey estimates of perinatal mortality in Malawi
Julio Romero Pietro and colleagues from the RAMMPS consortium -
Estimating adult and old age mortality
during the period preceding and throughout the COVID-19 outbreak in
Malawi: Findings from a mobile phone survey
Monica Jamali-Phiri and colleagues from the RAMMPS consortium -
The use of mobile phone surveys for rapid mortality monitoring: a national study in Burkina Faso
Kassoum Dianou and colleagues from the RAMMPS consortium -
Pandemic excess deaths in rural Bihar: Evidence from the Bihar Mortality Assessment Phone Survey 2022
Vipul Paikra, Apurva Bamezai, Murad Banaji, Payal Hathi, Aditi Priya, MR Sharan, Kanika Sharma, Chanchal Kumar Singh, Harsha Thirumurthy, Sangita Vyas and Aashish Gupta
16:45-17:30 KEYNOTE SPEECH BY RIDHI KASHYAP
17:30-19:00 DRINK
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9:00 – 10:30 SESSION 5: ADDRESSING SELECTIVITY OF RESPONDENTS IN MOBILE PHONE
SURVEYS (Chair: A. Menashe-Oren)
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Interactive
voice response surveys (IVRs) as a method for increasing
representativeness of rural respondents in mobile phone surveys:
findings from Malawi
Malebogo Tlhajoane and colleagues from the RAMMPS consortium -
Validation of
Rapid Mortality Mobile Phone Surveys for Neonatal Deaths and Stillbirths
in Rural Bangladesh using Closest Confidant Methodology
Lena Kan and colleagues from the RAMMPS consortium -
Selection Bias in Adult Mortality Measurement Through Mobile Phone Surveys in Low- and Middle- income Countries
Sahar Ahmed -
Rapidly implemented Covid-19 telephone survey in urban and rural Malawi using 3 sampling strategies
Estelle McLean, Andrew Matchado, Jullita Kenala Malava, Cynthia Katundu, Veronica Malabwe, Robert Stewart
10:30-10:45 COFFEE BREAK
10:45 – 12:00 SESSION 6: INTEGRATING DEMOGRAPHIC AND SPATIAL DATA (Chair: C. Linard)
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Examining the potential of residential land use in the production of large-scale and improved gridded population maps
Assane Niang Gadiaga, Ortis Yankey, Chris Nnanatu, Thomas Abott, Heather Chamberlain, Attila Lazar, Andy Tatem -
Building the Link: Examining the Role of Infrastructure Exposure to Erosion in Climate Migration Outcomes in Alaska
Jessica A. Miller -
Using physical
trace measures and georeferenced pictures to understand love hotels in
Lima: How I learnt to believe in the trash and not in Google Maps
Ignacio Franco Vega
12:00-13:45 LUNCH
13:45 – 15:00 SESSION 7: SOCIAL MEDIA IN DEMOGRAPHIC AND SOCIOLOGICAL RESEARCH
(Chair: S. Dujardin)
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Monitoring internal migration flows using origin–destination data based on Twitter user profile locations
Long Nguyen -
A Comparative Analysis of Digital Public Discourse on China’s Population Policies: A Case Study of Sina Weibo and Twitter
Yao Li -
Gender differences
in online visibility of early-career researchers: Are men more likely
to gain mentions on Twitter and benefit more?
Xinyi Zhao -
Building a dynamic social vulnerability index using Facebook data
Sebastien Dujardin
15:00-15:15 COFFEE BREAK
15:15 – 16:45 SESSION 8: UNCONVENTIONAL DATA FOR STUDYING COMPLEX EMERGENCIES AND CLIMATE CHANGE (Chair: A. Rees)
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Let's look at temporality in adaptation research! Collecting data through structured timeline mapping during interviews
Jelena Luyts, Nathalie Burnay, Etienne Piguet, Issa Mballo, Florence De Longueville, Sabine Henry -
How many call attempts? Assessing and
elaborating on response rates of phone surveys among Forcibly Displaced
Populations in Mozambique with statistical evidence
Ilgi Bozdag and Hyunju Park -
Estimating death rates in complex humanitarian emergencies using the network survival method
Casey F. Breen and Dennis M. Feehan -
Subnational population projections for
humanitarian response in Ukraine: integration and cross-validation of
traditional and non-traditional sources
Romesh Silva, Mallika Snyder, Mansuk Daniel Han, Volodymyr Sariogolo, Ella Libanova
16:45-17:00 CLOSING AND PRESENTATION OF THE QUETELET JOURNAL (Ph. Bocquier)
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