Would it be helpful to put some or all of the survey data on a data visualisation software like google data studio or similar? This would allow regional leaders to quickly understand their country/city data and track trends. It might also save time by reducing the need to do so many summary posts every year and provide new graphs on request.
We are thinking about putting a lot more analyses on the public bookdown next year, rather than in the summaries, which might serve some of this function. As you’ll be aware, it’s not that difficult to generate the same analysis for each specific country.
A platform that would allow more specific customisation of the analyses (e.g. breakdowns by city and gender and age etc.) would be less straightforward, since we’d need to ensure that no analyses could be sensitive or de-anonymising.
Unfortunately, we committed to not share any individual data available (except to CEA, if respondents opted in to do that). We’re still happy to receive requests from people, such as yourself, who would like to see additional aggregate analyses (though the caveat about them not being potentially de-anonymising still applies, which is particularly an issue where people want analyses looking at a particular geographic area with a small number of EAs).
We are thinking about putting a lot more analyses on the public bookdown next year, rather than in the summaries, which might serve some of this function. As you’ll be aware, it’s not that difficult to generate the same analysis for each specific country.
A platform that would allow more specific customisation of the analyses (e.g. breakdowns by city and gender and age etc.) would be less straightforward, since we’d need to ensure that no analyses could be sensitive or de-anonymising.
Unfortunately, we committed to not share any individual data available (except to CEA, if respondents opted in to do that). We’re still happy to receive requests from people, such as yourself, who would like to see additional aggregate analyses (though the caveat about them not being potentially de-anonymising still applies, which is particularly an issue where people want analyses looking at a particular geographic area with a small number of EAs).