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and Sarker, 2006). Researchers in the UK are
also fortunate to have the birthcohortstud-
ies, which follow individuals from birth; the
most recent Millennium Cohort has a clus-
tered design so that local geographies can be
researched (www.cls.ioe.ac.uk/mcs/). Another
source is through record linkage of adminis-
trative data; this is likely to become of increas-
ing importance as part of evidence-based
policywhereby data are collected and dis-
seminated on small local areas; a substan-
tial and growing example of this is the
Neighbourhood Statistics website (http://
neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/) which has,
for example, linked claimant count data to local
areas toprovide anannuallyupdated measure of
incomepoverty. The potential for such admin-
istrative data is immense but is challenging
because all sorts of bias are likely to be present.
An important recent development has been the
use of a model-based approach to the use of
records from different sources. Thus Jackson,
Best and Richardson (2008) were able to use an
overallmulti-level modelto combine detailed
individual survey data from the Millennium
Cohort Study with large-scale administrative
data from the National births register, elaborat-
ing the model to handle a range of biases.
In Britain, the UK Data Archive (http://
http://www.data-archive.ac.uk/) is the major reposi-
tory of digital social science data; while in the
USA, this role is filled by the Inter-University
Consortium for Political and Social Research
(http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/); globally such
archives are organized into the International
Federation of Data Organizations (http://
http://www.ifdo.org/). All these websites have exten-
sive search capabilities for identifying data
being sought. King (1995) has gone further
in his call that to ensure scientific integrity,
replication data sets need to be made available
that include all information necessary to
reproduce empirical results; including soft-
ware code for the particular analysis that has
been undertaken. This is now being made
manifest in the Virtual Data Centre (http://
thedata.org/). Secondary analysis of qualita-
tive data has been of less importance but its
use is growing (Heaton, 1998). kj
Suggested reading
Boslaugh (2007); Heaton (2004).
section A territorial division of a country
associated with an electoral cleavage created
when a political party mobilizes support
there based on policies with particular local
relevance. The classic sectional cleavage
occurred in the USA, where for most of
the century following the Civil War the
Democratic party mobilized majority support
in the states that had wished to secede,
against the Republican party, which granted
equality of civil rights to African-Americans
and endedslavery. rj
Suggested reading
Archer and Taylor (1981).
sectoral model A model of residential pat-
terns developed by Homer Hoyt (1895–1984:
see Hoyt, 1939) for US cities, involving the
segregation of housing of different quality and
value into separate sectors radiating from the
city centre along major routeways. Changes in
the character of a residential area within a
sector involved afilteringprocess whereby
relatively affluent residents moved towards the
urban fringe, thereby yielding their homes and
neighbourhoods to lower-status in-migrants
(cf.invasion and succession). The model –
developed for mortgage-lending applications –
was presented as an alternative to thezonal
modeland was later incorporated with it in
a multiple nuclei model(see figure for
that entry). rj
secularism Anideologyin whichreligion
and supernatural beliefs are not central to
understanding the world, both religious beli-
efs and religious institutions should not inter-
fere with the public affairs of a society,
and are segregated from matters ofgovern-
ance. It is often associated withenlighten-
mentineurope, with its turn towardsscience
and rationalism and its move away from reli-
gion and superstition. Secularism as a philoso-
phy owes its origins to George Jacob Holyoake
(1860), who introduced the idea that life
should be lived by reference to ethical prin-
ciples, and the world understood by proces-
ses of reasoning, rather than by reference
to God or gods, or other supernatural con-
cepts. From the perspective of government
and governance, secularism refers to a policy
that separates religious authority from the
state. The opposite of secularism is usually
theocracy; that is, where religion has a major
role in government.
The secularist movement is split between
those who believe that secularism leads logic-
ally to anti-religious propaganda andactiv-
ism, and those who do not. Most modern
‘Western’ societies today are thought to be
secular. Most would have near-complete free-
dom of religion. Religion does not officially
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SECULARISM