- Land market and housing
- Media, communication and languages
- Living conditions and well-being
- Employment and labour market
- Population, demography and census
- Migration
- Enterprise
- Finance
- Luxembourg
- Longitudinal data
- Individual
- Household
- Social Structure : 31
- Social Networks : 1
- Chief Income Earners (Family Roles) : 140
- Parental Role (Family Roles) : 1
- Occupational Status (Social Status) : 4
- Education, teaching & training
- Migration
- Luxembourg
- Survey data
- Individual
- Social Inequality
Panel Socio-Economique Liewen zu Lëtzebuerg III (PSELL3)
Data by theme
Data by country
Data type
Data unit
Socio-Economic Panel of Liewen zu Lëtzebuerg III (PSELL3)
Variable keywords :
PSELL 3 (Panel Socio-Economique Liewen zu Lëtzebuerg) is a survey conducted amongst people and households residing in the Grand Duchy with the aim of gaining an understanding of their living conditions. The socioeconomic panel was first constituted in 2003 and is used to build and test social and economic indicators and assess the impact of economic and social policies on the population's living conditions, particularly in terms of income, work, social security, education, health, housing, transport, consumption and savings.
Pratiques culturelles 2009 (Culture 2009)
Data by theme
Data by country
Data type
Data unit
Cultural practices - 2009
Database keywords :
From September to December 2009, LISER (CEPS/INSTEAD when the survey was conducted) carried out the second large-scale cultural survey commissioned by the Luxembourg Ministry of Culture. The topics covered include sociocultural leisure pursuits, reading habits, use of cultural venues, use of media, etc. Analysis of the data provided a picture of cultural practices in 2009 that could be compared with the first survey, conducted in 1999, to see the changes that had occurred. A total of 2,000 people aged 15 or over, seen as representing Luxembourg society, were questioned (note that the panel grew, as it comprised only 1,600 people in 1999). Questions were asked about every aspect of their cultural practice: museums, cinema, theatre, literature, written and audiovisual press, live and recorded entertainment, and music, including their 'mode of consumption' (frequency, weekdays, weekends, or holidays, for example) and, lastly, about their overall satisfaction with what was available in Luxembourg in this respect.