Policy Press
27 Critical statistical literacy and interactive data visualisations
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Jim Ridgway
, James Nicholson , Sinclair Sutherland and Spencer Hedger
Abstract
Large amounts of data, relevant to decision making and political argument, are now available. However, these data are often accessible only to people with reasonably developed skills in data acquisition and exploration; less skilled users must depend on interpretations by others. This chapter shows how large amounts of evidence relevant to decision making can be made accessible to a broad public, via software the authors have developed and made widely available. The Constituency Explorer resulted from a collaboration between the House of Commons Library and Durham University, and was designed to support analysis and decision making in the 2015 and 2017 UK general elections. It facilitates access to 150 variables for each of the 650 parliamentary constituencies in the UK, which can be explored in an interactive way. The authors describe the design and features of the interface, and some of the ways it has been used. Finally, they outline some strategies for public engagement which include ‘gamification’ via a quiz accessible to smartphones.
Abstract
Large amounts of data, relevant to decision making and political argument, are now available. However, these data are often accessible only to people with reasonably developed skills in data acquisition and exploration; less skilled users must depend on interpretations by others. This chapter shows how large amounts of evidence relevant to decision making can be made accessible to a broad public, via software the authors have developed and made widely available. The Constituency Explorer resulted from a collaboration between the House of Commons Library and Durham University, and was designed to support analysis and decision making in the 2015 and 2017 UK general elections. It facilitates access to 150 variables for each of the 650 parliamentary constituencies in the UK, which can be explored in an interactive way. The authors describe the design and features of the interface, and some of the ways it has been used. Finally, they outline some strategies for public engagement which include ‘gamification’ via a quiz accessible to smartphones.
Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents iii
- List of figures, tables and boxes vii
- Notes on contributors ix
- Foreword xv
- Preface xix
- General introduction 1
-
How data are changing
- Statistical work: the changing occupational landscape 13
- The creation and use of big administrative data 23
- Data analytics 35
- Social media data 47
-
Counting in a globalised world
- Adult skills surveys and transnational organisations: globalising educational policy 65
- Using survey data: towards valid estimates of poverty in the South 79
- Counting the population in need of international protection globally 91
- Tax justice and the challenges of measuring illicit financial flows 103
-
Statistics and the changing role of the state
- The control and ‘fitness for purpose’ of UK official statistics 119
- The statistics of devolution 133
- Welfare reform: national policies with local impacts 145
- From ‘welfare’ to ‘workfare’, and back again? Social insecurity and the changing role of the state 157
- Access to data and NHS privatisation: reducing public accountability 171
-
Economic life
- The ‘distribution question’: measuring and evaluating trends in inequality 187
- Labour market statistics 199
- The financial system: money makes the world go around 213
- The difficulty of building comprehensive tax avoidance data 225
- Tax and spend decisions: did austerity improve financial numeracy and literacy? 237
-
Inequalities in health and wellbeing
- Health divides 251
- Measuring social wellbeing 265
- Re-engineering health policy research to measure equity impacts 277
- The Generation Game: ending the phoney information war between young and old 291
-
Advancing social progress through critical statistical literacy
- The Radical Statistics Group: using statistics for progressive social change 307
- Lyme disease politics and evidence-based policy making in the UK 319
- Counting the uncounted: contestations over casualisation data in Australian universities 327
- The quantitative crisis in UK sociology 337
- Critical statistical literacy and interactive data visualisations 349
- Full Fact 359
- What a difference a dataset makes? Data journalism and/as data activism 365
- Epilogue: progressive ways ahead 375
- Index 381
Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents iii
- List of figures, tables and boxes vii
- Notes on contributors ix
- Foreword xv
- Preface xix
- General introduction 1
-
How data are changing
- Statistical work: the changing occupational landscape 13
- The creation and use of big administrative data 23
- Data analytics 35
- Social media data 47
-
Counting in a globalised world
- Adult skills surveys and transnational organisations: globalising educational policy 65
- Using survey data: towards valid estimates of poverty in the South 79
- Counting the population in need of international protection globally 91
- Tax justice and the challenges of measuring illicit financial flows 103
-
Statistics and the changing role of the state
- The control and ‘fitness for purpose’ of UK official statistics 119
- The statistics of devolution 133
- Welfare reform: national policies with local impacts 145
- From ‘welfare’ to ‘workfare’, and back again? Social insecurity and the changing role of the state 157
- Access to data and NHS privatisation: reducing public accountability 171
-
Economic life
- The ‘distribution question’: measuring and evaluating trends in inequality 187
- Labour market statistics 199
- The financial system: money makes the world go around 213
- The difficulty of building comprehensive tax avoidance data 225
- Tax and spend decisions: did austerity improve financial numeracy and literacy? 237
-
Inequalities in health and wellbeing
- Health divides 251
- Measuring social wellbeing 265
- Re-engineering health policy research to measure equity impacts 277
- The Generation Game: ending the phoney information war between young and old 291
-
Advancing social progress through critical statistical literacy
- The Radical Statistics Group: using statistics for progressive social change 307
- Lyme disease politics and evidence-based policy making in the UK 319
- Counting the uncounted: contestations over casualisation data in Australian universities 327
- The quantitative crisis in UK sociology 337
- Critical statistical literacy and interactive data visualisations 349
- Full Fact 359
- What a difference a dataset makes? Data journalism and/as data activism 365
- Epilogue: progressive ways ahead 375
- Index 381