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Activity Number: 469 - 2022 GSS/SRMS/SSS Student Paper Competition Award Winners
Type: Topic Contributed
Date/Time: Wednesday, August 10, 2022 : 2:00 PM to 3:50 PM
Sponsor: Survey Research Methods Section
Abstract #322106
Title: On the Reliability of Multiple Systems Estimation for the Quantification of Modern Slavery
Author(s): Olivier Binette* and Rebecca Steorts
Companies: Duke University and Duke University
Keywords: multiple systems estimation; capture-recapture; modern slavery
Abstract:

The quantification of modern slavery has received increased attention recently as organizations have come together to produce global estimates, where multiple systems estimation (MSE) is often used to this end. Echoing a long-standing controversy, disagreements have re-surfaced regarding the underlying MSE assumptions, the robustness of MSE methodology, and the accuracy of MSE estimates in this application. Our goal is to help address and move past these controversies. To do so, we review MSE, its assumptions, and commonly used models for modern slavery applications. We introduce all of the publicly available modern slavery datasets in the literature, providing a reproducible analysis and highlighting current issues. Specifically, we utilize an internal consistency approach that constructs subsets of data for which ground truth is available, allowing us to evaluate the accuracy of MSE estimators. Next, we propose a characterization of the large sample bias of estimators as a function of misspecified assumptions. Then, we propose an alternative to traditional (e.g., bootstrap-based) assessments of reliability, which allows us to visualize trajectories of MSE estimates to illustrate


Authors who are presenting talks have a * after their name.

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