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Sunday, July 25th, 2010 02:24 pm
I've been pondering how to do polls about various things in a way which minimises people feeling excluded or otherwise misrepresented. And I think the easiest way to test those ideas out is make polls and see what people don't like about them!

First off, nationality. As was pointed out to me the last time I tried doing a poll on this topic, just because I've lived in the same country my whole life and fit comfortably into it's majority culture doesn't mean other people's identities are so simple. It struck me that asking where people are currently located is a much less ambiguous question though of course you have to be careful not to then make the jump from "geographic location" to "national identity" in the analysis etc (especially since people might be on a three day business trip or something :)).

So! Please do this poll and then tell me anything about it that bugs you.

Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: Just the Poll Creator, participants: 39

In which geographic region are you currently located?

Africa
0 (0.0%)

North America
12 (30.8%)

South America
1 (2.6%)

Asia
1 (2.6%)

Europe
9 (23.1%)

Oceania
17 (43.6%)

Polar regions
1 (2.6%)

Somewhere at sea
0 (0.0%)

The sky/Space/parallel universe etc
0 (0.0%)

Other
0 (0.0%)



Using Wikipedia's Regions of the World. I divided North and South America since they are two different continents.

Another different question I could ask is "in which geographic location is the place or places that you consider "home" in some significant way?" but that's a bit vague, maybe.

Any alternatives, extra questions or extra answers etc you think would be better?
Tags:
Sunday, July 25th, 2010 01:25 pm (UTC)
It's interesting that divisions which to me seem founded on perfectly obvious and important geographical boundaries strike you as arbitrary! I suspect this means that as someone who has been trained in geography I have been inculcated with the same geographers' mindset which informed the choice of boundaries.

Incidentally, the division of New Guinea between Oceania and Asia, is based on the political division.
Monday, July 26th, 2010 09:25 am (UTC)
It's probably not intuitive because the groupings are based on multiple criteria - a complex combination of cultural, political and continental.

For some reason geography is often very badly taught (no reflection on your school intended) which leaves a lot of people confused for life.

I once did a poll of my flist listing every country except the USA which was under 'other', this caused a degree of amusement and revenge amongst the rest of us.
Monday, July 26th, 2010 03:55 pm (UTC)
Have I told you about how hilariously awful my geographic knowledge is?
(screened comment)
Wednesday, July 28th, 2010 07:26 am (UTC)
I thought Edinburgh was in England -- I only discovered it was actually, you know, the capital of Scotland, when we were watching Murder Rooms and I asked why they had Scottish accents.

I'm always momentarily confused when I see that Greece is to the east, not west, of Italy.

I thought the Bermuda Triangle was near Turkey, and that the West Indies were next to Asia.

I always thought the western bit of Mexico was Florida.