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Niger National Survey on Household Living Conditions and Agriculture 2011-2012

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General Info
Original or alternative title 
Niger l'Enquête Nationale sur les Conditions de Vie des Ménages et l'Agriculture 2011 (ECVM/A-2011)
Geography 
Niger (NER)
Coverage type 
Country
Time period covered 
07/2011 - 01/2012
Data type
Survey:
  • Community
  • GPS coordinates (GIS)
  • Household
  • Interview
  • Longitudinal
  • Sample registration
  • Urban-rural representative
Summary 

Part of the Integrated Surveys on Agriculture project at the World Bank, the ECVMA-2011 survey is the first in a longitudinal study of household conditions and agriculture. Each wave of the survey consists of two visits, the first during planting season and the second during the harvest. Household, agriculture, and community questionnaires are administered in the first visit while the second visit consists only of the household and agriculture questionnaires. The total sample size was 4,074 households in eight regions.

Keywords 
Agriculture, Alcohol use, Antenatal care, Assets, Birth certificates, Birth control pills, Birth place, Breastfeeding, Child labor, Community action, Condoms, Contraceptive implants, Contraceptives, Cooking fuels, Coping behavior, Crime, Crops, Diabetes, Diarrhea, Diet, Disasters, Domestic migration, Education, Education access, Education expenditures, Electricity, Employment, Employment benefits, Ethnicity, Family composition, Family planning, Family size, Fertilizers, Food expenditures, Health care access, Health care use, Health facility conditions, Health insurance, Health status, Hospitals, Hours worked, Household air pollution, Household deaths, Household expenditures, Housing, Housing conditions, Housing materials, IUDs, Income, Infrastructure, Injectable contraceptives, Injuries, Insecticide-treated bednets, Internet, Land ownership, Lighting, Literacy, Live births, Marital status, Mass media, Maternal age, Meningitis, Military service, Occupations, Oral conditions, Parental survival, Peptic ulcer disease, Personal health expenditures, Pesticides, Pharmacies, Place of delivery, Poverty, Pregnancy, Prices, Private health facilities, Public health facilities, Refrigeration, Sanitation, School conditions, School enrollment, Schools, Sense organ diseases, Sexual sterilization, Skilled birth attendants, Skin diseases, Telephones, Tobacco smoking, Traditional birth control, Traditional medicine, Transportation, Typhoid and paratyphoid fevers, Unemployment, Unintentional injuries, Violence, Waste disposal, Water supply