The Social Survey in Global Perspective traces the evolution of social surveys beyond celebrated metropolitan examples, exploring their worldwide impact across the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Contributors examine surveys in diverse contexts from colonial territories to grassroots women s organizations to reveal methodological challenges and profound social influence. The collection illuminates how surveys shaped state power, social movements, and individual identity while often reproducing existing hierarchies. By exploring the double-sided legacy of social surveying as an engine of both progressive reform and state surveillance this book offers a critical reassessment of empirical practices that continue to determine how we understand ourselves, our societies and our world.