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Canadian Century Research Infrastructure CCRI

Canadian Century Research Infrastructure CCRI. An Interdisciplinary Census Database Project. Canadian Century Research Infrastructure CCRI. A cross-Canada initiative to develop databases from large random samples of manuscript census records for the period 1911-1951.

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Canadian Century Research Infrastructure CCRI

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  1. Canadian Century Research Infrastructure CCRI An Interdisciplinary Census Database Project.

  2. Canadian Century Research Infrastructure CCRI • A cross-Canada initiative to develop databases from large random samples of manuscript census records for the period 1911-1951. • These will be linked to contextual data and other Census sources covering periods from 1871 to 1901 and from 1961 to 2001. • http://www.canada.uottawa.ca/ccri/

  3. The User Community • Primary users will be sociologists, historians, geographers and economists, doing research on 20th Century Canada. • We will produce different microdata files and other products for different users. • Some researchers will access detailed data on a basis that ensures confidentiality by working in secure Research Data Centres. • Other researchers will access anonymized public use files that provide less detail about individuals. • We also expect the microdata files and linked contextual information to be used for teaching at all levels from high schools to postgraduate study. • All researchers will require a user interface for access to contextual data (“metadata”) and to documentation of how Census questions were asked and coded at different times.

  4. User Goals • Most users will want to write small or large research reports. • Many users will want to compare results over time: - others will want to compare Canadian against US or British data. • Since questions & enumerator instructions vary we will provide extensive online documentation. • Some potential users will want to do genealogical research but this is not possible because Census data from 1911 on are confidential.

  5. User Interface (UI) Conceptual structure of the final database: A series of web-extractable, searchable, integrated and harmonized research databases

  6. UI Design Requirements • Supports data extraction and download for anonymized microdata. • Supports searchable contextual data and documentation. • Equal prominence to English and French. • “Drill-down” for further layers of documentation, data and context. • “Green Balloons” as organizing metaphor.

  7. The 1911 Census manuscript form

  8. Geocoding allows mapping of social patterns over time

  9. Population Density: 1911

  10. IPUMS: a successful model • Îp’-ums - Integrated Public Use Microdata Series based at the University of Minnesota. • Makes available US Census files from 1850. • Differences between IPUMS & the Canadian Project (CCRI). • CCRI will have extensive retrievability of contextual data (“meta-data”) via an attractive user interface. • CCRI takes more steps to preserve confidentiality. It also includes data on religion. • CCRI has a large geocoding component.

  11. IPUMS-USA Welcome Screen

  12. CCRI Welcome Screen (English)

  13. CCRI Active Links Prototype

  14. Drill Down to User Introduction

  15. Drill Down to Instructions

  16. 1911: Citizenship & Religion

  17. 1911: Education & Languages

  18. Drill down to Newspapers

  19. Newspaper Report ofLegislative Debate

  20. Drill Down to House of Commons

  21. Drill Down to 2ndary Bibliographies

  22. Detail within 2ndary Bibliographies

  23. Closing Questions • Is there any better metaphor than “green balloons”? • How can we foreground spatial mapping aspects of the database? • Can we simplify users’ problem formulation, navigation and searching?

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