Creating complex surveys
Thanks to his specialist expertise, Yaşar’s next step brought him to the Cluster of Excellence “The Politics of Inequality”, which was established in 2019. In the project “Ethnic Policies – Remedy for Between-Group Inequalities?”, political scientists and linguists are studying how state minorities policy has affected equality for the Sámi, an indigenous people in Scandinavia. A central element of the study involves surveying members of this ethnic minority in Sweden and Norway, which is where Yaşar’s particular expertise comes into play. This is because he surveyed local and national politicians in several European countries for his doctoral thesis, including members of the Committee of the Regions (CoR). Within the EU, this body represents districts, provinces, cities and communities to ensure that such sub-national institutions can make their voices heard alongside the national governments and parliaments of EU member states. “Through this empirical work I acquired a broad overview of the whole survey process”, explains Yaşar. This, he adds, includes compiling the random sample, preparing the questionnaire, establishing contact with the respondents and analysing the data. “The Sámi are a small minority group and there is no official record showing that somebody belongs to it. So how do you find a representative sample of a population that is hard to reach?”, is how Yaşar describes the problems posed by this kind of empirical study from the outset. Currently he is working on the technical basis for the survey, which also involves cooperating with opinion research institutes in Norway and Sweden. The survey is due to take place over a period of several months, starting in early 2021.