2019
DOI: 10.1111/psj.12304
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The Sensitivity of Country Ranks to Index Construction and Aggregation Choice: The Case of Immigration Policy

Abstract: How sensitive are country ranks to the aggregation function used in index construction? This paper tests whether different aggregation functions come to different results in regard to the ranking of countries. Indices within the field of immigration and integration policy are analyzed, yet, the results pertain to index building across the social sciences. The paper discusses three aggregation methods: the arithmetic mean, the geometric mean, and a noncompensatory/non‐linear aggregation function based on the Co… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…The simplest approach is to simply “add ‘em up” by counting each element equally (equivalent to assigning all included rules a weight of “1” and any excluded rules a weight of “0”). Unit weighting has a long tradition in state politics research (e.g., Squire’s index of legislative professionalism), partly because “add ‘em up” scales are usually highly correlated with measures that assign magnitudes to the weights (e.g., see Bowen & Greene, ; and nearly the same as calculating the geometric mean, see Bjerre et al, ). Unit weighting does require some subjective decision making by the investigator, however.…”
Section: A Third Way: a Seven‐step Approach To Measuring Complex Publmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The simplest approach is to simply “add ‘em up” by counting each element equally (equivalent to assigning all included rules a weight of “1” and any excluded rules a weight of “0”). Unit weighting has a long tradition in state politics research (e.g., Squire’s index of legislative professionalism), partly because “add ‘em up” scales are usually highly correlated with measures that assign magnitudes to the weights (e.g., see Bowen & Greene, ; and nearly the same as calculating the geometric mean, see Bjerre et al, ). Unit weighting does require some subjective decision making by the investigator, however.…”
Section: A Third Way: a Seven‐step Approach To Measuring Complex Publmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This large body of literature, however, raises the question of how state welfare policy should be measured. The challenge of measuring a complex policy is the subject of many papers in this special issue (Bjerre, Römer, & Zobel, ; Goodman, ; Monogan, ; Reich, ). These papers grapple with more general questions of comparative policy measurement and most especially questions concerning whether specific aspects of policy should be combined into summary scores that measure legislative output.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Simple, additive aggregation is often the main type used, though other procedures exist and can produce different kinds of rankings and results (Bjerre et al, ; Plutzer et al, ). Aggregation decisions can influence the relative ranking of units within the index, whether those are countries, or U.S. states (Bjerre et al, ). Moreover, as Monogan (), Reich () and Plutzer et al () all demonstrate, aggregation choices can influence the correlations with various predictors and thus either overestimate or hide significant relationships (also see D'Urso, ).…”
Section: Measurement and Aggregationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aggregation decisions are a significant, if often overlooked, component of immigration research design. Simple, additive aggregation is often the main type used, though other procedures exist and can produce different kinds of rankings and results (Bjerre et al, ; Plutzer et al, ). Aggregation decisions can influence the relative ranking of units within the index, whether those are countries, or U.S. states (Bjerre et al, ).…”
Section: Measurement and Aggregationmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation