Data Collection for Network Sampling Approaches for Rare and Hard to Reach Populations: Lessons Learned
M. Giovanna Merli is Professor of Public Policy, Sociology and Global Health in the Sanford School of Public Policy, Duke University.
M. Giovanna Merli is Professor of Public Policy, Sociology and Global Health in the Sanford School of Public Policy, Duke University.
Professor Weir’s research interests relate to methods that identify and characterize local sexual and injecting drug use networks in resource poor settings.
Kate Weisshaar is a sociologist whose research focuses on gender and economic stratification processes within families, workplaces, and society, with an interest in developing critical tests of causal processes by leveraging data and quantitative methods.
Professor Warren is a sociologist, demographer, population health scholar, and education policy researcher with experience and expertise in the collection, production, and dissemination of large-scale data products for research on health, aging, education, and labor force outcomes.
Annie Green Howard has considerable expertise in high-dimensional exposure modeling, longitudinal and multilevel modeling, multivariate, pathway and structural equation modeling, latent variables, and missing data.
Hedwig (Hedy) Lee is a Professor of Sociology at Washington University in St. Louis.
Kathryn Grace is an Assistant Professor of Geography, Environment and Society at the University of Minnesota.
Catherine Panter-Brick is Professor of Anthropology, Health, and Global Affairs at Yale University, and the Medical Anthropology Senior Editor for Social Science & Medicine.
Hans-Peter Kohler, Ph.D., is a social and economic demographer whose current research focuses on health, demography and social change in developing and developed countries.
Kenneth A. Bollen is Henry Rudolph Immerwahr Distinguished Professor in the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience and Department of Sociology.