The
Family Transfers Project (FTP)
General
Aims
This
is the homepage of the Family Transfers Project (FTP), led by Alex
Weinreb and Jere Behrman.
The overall goal of the Family Transfers Project (FTP) was to examine inter-
and intra-generational flows of resources (money and time) within the basic
family support network and to measure the extent to which those support
systems are sensitive to changes in health status among family members
(i.e. between
adult respondents and their parents, uncles and aunts, brothers and sisters,
and children).
The FTP can be considered a special type of Social Network Project,
since it examines the effects on behavior of relations with a
predefined universe of family network partners (rather than respondent-defined
list of general social networks partners). The FTP sample is
a randomly selected sub-sample of respondents who participated
in the first
wave of the Malawi
Diffusion and Ideational Change Project.
The FTP is formally affiliated with the Center for Social Research
of the University of Malawi in Zomba, Malawi. Alex Weinreb
conducted initial field tests in June, 1998, and then led the
fieldwork
team
over a
10 week
period
between June and August, 1999.
Data
Availability
All
survey data collected by the Family Transfers Project are available
for download free of charge.
Three
types of survey data are available for public use. These include:
• cross-sectional,
individual-level data for men and women;
• cross-sectional, couple data for husbands and wives, and their parents;
• longitudinal, individual-level data for men and women in the FTP linked
to their earlier records collected by the first wave of the Malawi Diffusion
and Ideational Change Project.
Qualitative
data collected by Mike Mtika for the Family Transfers Project are
also available for download.
Funding
The
Family Transfers Project was jointly funded by the Center for AIDS
Research (CFAR) of the Population Studies Center at the University
of Pennsylvania, grant CA45008, and by the Population Aging Research
Center (PARC) of the Population Studies Center at the University of
Pennsylvania, supported by the National Institute of Aging (NIA), grant
AG12836.