This course is intended to acquaint students with a wide variety of research methods and styles
used by students of political phenomena, concentrating on those approaches that are essentially
nonquantitative in orientation. Other than where necessary for purposes of comparison, the
seminar will not cover standard quantitatively-oriented topics such as survey design,
experimental and quasi-experimental research, or statistics. The particular topics to be
discussed include a variety of approaches, some positivist in orientation, some nonpositivist,
but all involving an empirical emphasis.
While the course does not presume a working familiarity with standard, quantitatively-oriented
methodologies, those students who can draw on such a background may be advantaged in the
course because those standard methodologies can be used as a baseline for evaluating the
strengths and weaknesses of the alternative approaches that are the concern for this semester.
I am not suggesting that quantitative methods are in any way better, simply that to judge one
method, it must be compared to some other method.
These themes will be the focus of our consideration and comparison of the
methods that will be discussed during the semester.
While there is a "how-to-do" element in the course, I believe that one only
learns "how to do" research in a particular style by actually do it (hopefully
in a structured situation where substantial feedback and assistance is readily
available). While for some of the research approaches we will discuss there
is no way that they can actually be carried out in the kind of course context
this will be, the course will incorporate a significant element of practical
experience focused on differing approaches to data collection. During the first
part of the semester, the emphasis will be on the kinds of opportunities, problems,
and advantages offered by different research designs. Throughout the semester,
we will try to draw on the experiences of others to learn about the pluses and
minuses of different research strategies.
The course will be structured as a seminar; I do not plan to lecture. This
places a substantial burden on students to come to the sessions prepared to
talk. While in preparing the seminar, I drew upon a variety of methodologies
that I have in fact used at one time or another, many of the methods to be discussed
are not in my repertoire. I may, at various stages, bring in guests with experience
in some of those methods.
While the normal class meeting time is Thursday afternoon, there are two or
three occasions during the semester when it will be necessary to reschedule
class. The first will be September 27 which is Yom Kippur; we will work out
an alternative meeting time for this class at our first session. The second
is November 22 which is Thanksgiving; that week will meet at noon on Monday.
I may need to reschedule a third class in late October or early November.
The most difficult practical part of qualitative research is data collection
and analysis. While research designs can be discussed and evaluated in the abstract,
data collection and analysis is something that requires experience as well as
theory. To accomplish this I have tried to identify a research exercise that
should be of interest to all students in the class: explaining what is required
to achieve success in undergraduate, university level teaching. We have a vast
field laboratory on university teaching readily available. Students will be
required to engage in several types of data collection to create a basis of
analysis of this question. The types of data will involve interviews of faculty
(at least three), interviews of students (at least three), nonparticipating
observation (of at least three different classes), and a journal of your own
teaching experience if you are currently teaching as either a TA or a lecturer,
or a retrospective assessment if you are not currently teaching. At least one
of the courses observed and one of each of the types of interviews must be done
in an area outside of the social sciences and humanities (i.e., in science,
math, engineering, medicine, etc.). You are welcome to define some specific
question about teaching that you would like to focus on (e.g., use of video
tools such as Powerpoint, role of teaching assistants, etc.); regardless of
whether you take a general or specfic approach, you will need to provide me
with a 3-5 page mini-research protocol on or before October 11 (the idea of
a research protocol will be discussed in class and in the readings). In thinking
about which classes you might observe, I would ask that you avoid classes with
untenured faculty members (they are under enough pressure in the classroom without
worrying that someone else is evaluating them). We will discuss the requirements
and procedures for this exercise in more detail as the semester progresses.
Grading in the course will be based upon seminar participation, and four written
assignments. During the semester there will be two 6-8 page essays; each of
these papers is to be a critique, with an emphasis on a methodological evaluation
of substantitive conclusions, of a minimum of two pieces of research dealing
with the same general substantive question. What I am seeking is a critical
look at how the same question can be approached empirically in different ways.
Students are encouraged to draw upon work in their own substantive fields in
preparing these essays. At least two pieces of research not among the assigned
readings must be discussed in each paper (also, students may not count the study
they present in the seminar toward the two required pieces of research in each
paper). One of the essays should focus on two studies that use fundamentally
different types of research designs (e.g., case study, multiple case studies,
cross-national, historical, etc.) and one should focus on two studies that use
different types of data collection (e.g., interviews, observation, surveys,
etc.). At least one study considered in each essay must rely primarily on qualitative
methodologies. The third assignment will be a 10-12 page analysis of the data
collected for the practical exercise; 2-4 pages of this assignment should be
devoted to an analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of the various types
of data you will have collected. The fourth written assignment will be a design
or protocol for a major piece of qualitative research; this is expected to be
a thorough and complete design for a doable project (e.g., a possible
dissertation project).
As the assignments make clear, readings are drawn from a combination of methodological
discussions and exemplary studies from the research styles covered. The reading
load is heavy, and the number of books involved is large. I have ordered as
"required" books that provide methodological discussions, and as "recommended"
those that are applications of methods; this reflects my presumption that students
may want to share some of the latter books (by forming "book buying collectives")
given the number of books involved. Students are expected to do all of
the reading listed under "required reading" whether or not the books were ordered
as required or recommended. The articles and chapters not in the required or
recommended books listed below are available in the Dean Room, at H.C. White
Library, and on the web (the online syllabus includes links to the online materials).
| Week
| Topic & Reading
|
PART I: APPROACHES TO ASSESSING RESEARCH METHODS
|
| 1 Sept. 6
|
RHETORIC AND RESEARCH
- Reading:
- Other items of interest:
- Nelson, Megill, and McCloskey (eds.), The Rhetoric of the
Human Sciences: Language and Argument in Scholarship and Public
Affairs
- McCloskey, The Rhetoric of Economics
- Edmondson, Rhetoric in Sociology
- Simon (ed.), Rhetoric in the Human Sciences
|
| 2 Sept. 13
|
VALIDITY AND INFERENCE
- Reading:
- Marshall
& Rossman, Designing Qualitative Research, 21-44.
- King et al., Designing Social Inquiry, pp. 34-74.
- Cook
& Campbell, Quasi-Experimentation: Design Analysis for Field
Settings, pp. 39-85.
- Kirk and Miller, Reliability and Validity in Qualitative Research,
9-52.
- Adcock and Collier, "Measurement Validity: A Shared Standard
for Qualitative and Quantitative Research," American Political
Science Review 95 (September 2001), pp. 529-546.
- Other items of interest:
- Cherryholmes, "Construct Validity and Discourses of Research,"
96 American Journal of Education 421 (May 1988).
- Weller and Romney, Systematic Data Collection
- Lincoln and Guba, "Establishing Trustworthiness," in Naturalistic
Inquiry, pp. 295-331.
|
PART II: ISSUES OF DESIGN IN QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
|
| 3 Sept. 20
|
THE CASE STUDY APPROACH
- Readings:
- Yin, Case Study Research: Design and Methods (2nd edition),
pp. ix-xi, 1-77.
- Kaufman, The Forest Ranger
- Other items of interest
- Eckstein, "Case Studies and Theory in Political Science," in
Greenstein and Polsby (eds.), Handbook of Political Science
- Feagin et al., The Case for the Case Study
- Stake, The Art of Case Study Research
- Hamel, Case Study Methods
- Van Evera, "What Are Case Studies? How Should They Be Performed?"
chapter 2 in Guide to Methods for Students of Political Science
- Stoecker, "Evaluating and Rethinking the Case Study," 39 Sociolgical
Review 80-112 (February 1991).
- Lipset, "The Biography of a Research Project: Union Democracy,"
pp. 111-139 in Hammond (ed.), Sociologists at Work.
|
|
|
|
|
|
4 Sept. 27
(This class will meet Monday, October 1, 2-4 pm due to a conflict with Yom
Kippur)
|
EXTENDING THE CASE STUDY: THE COMPARATIVE APPROACH
- Reading:
- Frendeis,
"Explanation of Variation and Detection of Covariation: The Purpose
and Logic of Comparative Analysis," 16 Comparative Political
Studies 255 (1983).
- Ragin,
The Comparative Method: Moving Beyond Qualitative and Quantitative
Strategies, pp. 19-53
- King et al., Designing Social Inquiry, pp. 75-149.
- Kritzer,
"The Military as a Target of Protest," Gandhi Marg
(January 1973).
- Levin,
"Urban Politics and Judicial Behavior," 1 Journal of
Legal Studies 193-221 (1972).
- Laitin,
""National Revivals and Violence," pp. 21-60 in Bowen
and Petersen, Critical Comparisons in Politics and Culture
(1999).
- Odell,
Negotiating the World Economy, pp. 109-135.
- Other items of interest:
- Lieberson, "Small N's and Big Conclusions: An Examination of
the Reasoning in Comparative Studies Based on a Small Number of
Cases," Social Forces 70: (December 1991), 307-320
- Fearon,
"Counterfactuals and Hypothesis Testing in Political Science," 43
World Politics 169-195 (January 1991).
- George,
"Case Studies and Theory Development: The Method of Structured,
Focused Comparison," pp. 43-68 in Lauren, Diplomacy: New Approaches
in History, Theory, & Policy.
- Mahoney, "Strategies of Causal Inference in Small-N Analysis,"
Sociological Methods & Research 28 (2000), 387-424.
- McKeown, "Case Studies and the Statistical Worldview: Review
of King, Keohane, and Verba's Designing Social Inquiry: Scientific
Inference in Qualitative Research," International Organization
53 (1999), 161-190.
- Collier, "The Comparative Method: Two Decades of Change," pp.
7-31 in Rustow and Erickson (eds.), Comparative Political Dynamics:
Global Research Perspectives.
- Smelser, Comparative Methods in the Social Science
- Przeworski and Teune, The Logic of Comparative Social Inquiry
- Gayle, "Applying 'Most Different Systems' Designs: Comparing
Development Policy in Alabama and Jamaica," Comparative Political
Studies 21 (1968), 257-280.
- Ragin and Zaret, "Theory and Method in Comparative Research:
Two Strategies," 61 Social Forces 731 (1983).
- Ragin (ed.), Issues and Alternatives in Comparative Research
- Young, The Effectivness of International Environmental Regimes
|
| 5 Oct. 4
|
CROSS-NATIONAL COMPARISON
- Reading:
- Sartori,
"Compare Why How: Comparing, Miscomparing and the Comparative Method,"
pp. 14-34 in Dogan and Kazancigil (eds.), Comparing Nations:
Concepts, Strategies, Substance.
- Dogan & Pelassy, How to Compare Nations (2nd edition)
- MacIntyre,
"Is a Science of Comparative Politics Possible?" in Against the
Self-Images of the Age: Essays on Ideology and Philosophy.
- Geddes,
"How the Cases You Choose Affect the Answers You Get: Selection
Bias in Comparative Politics," Political Analysis 1990 131-150.
- Sanders
and Hamilton, "Stories from the Front: Negotiating Cross-Cultural
Research Projects," pp. 101-126 in Sarat et al. (ed)., Crossing
Boundaries: Traditions and Transformations in Law and Society Research.
- Deeg
and Lutz, "Internationalization and Financial Federalism: the
United States and Germany at the Crossroads?" Comparative
Political Studies 33 (2000), 374-406.
- Roger
Karapin, "The Politics of Immigration Control in Britain and
Germany: Subnational Politicians and Social Movements," Comparative
Politics 31 (1999), 423-444.
- Kathryn
Firmin-Sellers, "Institutions, Context, and Outcomes: Explaining
French and British Rule in West Africa," Comparative Politics
32 (2000), 253-272.
- Other items of interest:
|
| 6 Oct. 11
|
HISTORICAL ANALYSIS
- Reading:
- Bloch, The Historian's Craft, pp. 3-137.
- King et al., Designing Social Inquiry, pp. 208-228.
- Aldrich
and Grant, "The Antifederalist, the First Congress, and the First
Parties," 55 Journal of Politics 295-326 (1993).
- Goldfield,
"Worker Insurgency, Radical Organization, and New Deal labor Legislation,"
American Political Science Review 83 (1989), 1257-82;
see also exchange between Skocpol
and Goldfield in APSR 84 (1990), 1297-1315.
- Umstead,
The Rise of Great Britain, pp. 134-147.
- Van
Bukleo, "My Own 'Desperate Deeds and Desperate Motives': How the
Project Evolved," pp. 206-221 in Shively, The Research Process
in Political Science (1984).
- Pitt,
"The Critical Analysis of Documentary Evidence," pp. 319-331 in
Lewis, Fist-Fights in the Kitchen: Manners and Methods in Social
Research (1975).
- Other items of interest:
- Barzun and Graf, The Modern Researcher
- Singer, "The Historical Experiment as a Research Strategy in
the Study of World Politics," Social Science History 2 (Fall
1977), 1-22.
- Mills, Sociological Imagination, pp. 143-164.
- Braudel, On History
- Shafer, A Guide to Historical Method
- Thompson, The Poverty of Theory
- Murphey, Our Knowledge of the Historical Past
- Winks, The Historian as Detective
- Stinchcombe, Theoretical Methods in Social History
|
|
******* MINI-PROTOCOL DUE AT CLASS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER
11 ********
|
| 7 Oct. 18
|
COMPARATIVE HISTORY
- Reading:
- Skocpol
and Somers, "The Uses of Comparative History in Macrosocial Inquiry,"
22 Comparative Studies in Society and History 174 (1980).
- Lustick,
"History, Historiography, and Political Science: Multiple Historical
Records and the Problem of Selection Bias," 90 American
Political Science Review (1996), 605-618.
- Skocpol, States and Social Revolutions, pp. 3-157.
- Mahoney,
"Nominal, Ordinal, and Narrative Appraisal in Macrocausal Analysis,
104 American Journal of Sociology (1999), 1154-96 (pages
1154-1169 only).
- Beisel,
"Class Culture and Campaigns Against Vice in Three American Cities,
1872-1892," American Sociological Review 55 (1990), 44-62.
- Orloff
and Skocpol, "Why Not Equal Protection? Explaining the Politics
of Public Social Spending in Britain, 1900-1911, and the United
States, 1880s-1920," 49 American Sociological Review 726-750
(1984).
- Other items of interest:
- Skocpol, Vision and Method in Historical Sociology
- Bonnell, "The Uses of Theory, Concepts and Comparison in Historical
Sociology," 22 Comparative Studies in Society and History
156 (1980).
- Fredrickson, "From Exceptionalism to Variability," in
The Comparative Imagination
- Moore, Social Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy
- Abrams, Historical Sociology
- Tilly, Big Structures, Large Processes, Huge Comparisons
|
PART III: METHODS OF DATA COLLECTION
|
|
|
| 8 Oct. 25
|
FIELD RESEARCH--GENERAL AND ETHICAL ISSUE
- Reading:
- Fetterman, Ethnography: Step by Step
- Liebow,
Tally's Corner, pp. 232-256.
- Zanca,
"Intruder in Uzbekistan: Walking the Line between Community
Needs and Anthropological Desiderata," pp. 153-171 in De Soto
and Dudwick (eds.), Fieldwork Dilemmas: Anthropologists in Postsocialist
States.
- Kirk and Miller, Reliability and Validity in Qualitative Research,
53-73
- Cassell,
"Ethical Principles for Conducting Fieldwork," 82 American Anthropologist
28 (1980).
- Spradley, The Ethnographic Interview, 3-39
- Yin, Case Study Research, pp. 78-101
- Additional assignment:
- Other items of interest:
- McLaughlin, "From the Field to the Courthouse: Shouls Social
Science Research Be Privileged?" Law & Social Inquiry
24 (Fall 1999), 925-1003 [including accompanying comments and rejoinder]
- Barrett and Cason, Facing the Field: A Practical Guide to Overseas
Social Science Research
- Sieber, Planning Ethically Responsible Research: A Guide for
Students and Internal Review Boards
- Whyte, Learning from the Field: A Guide From Experience,
35-64
- Agar, Speaking of Ethnography
- McGlynn and Tuden, Anthropological Approaches to Political
Behavior: Contribution from Ethnology
- Werner and Schoepfle, Systematic Fieldwork
- Warren, Gender Issues in Field Research
- Rynkiewich and Spradley, Ethics and Anthropology: Dilemmas
in Fieldwork
- Punch, The Politics and Ethics of Fieldwork
- Gubrium and Silverman (eds.), The Politics of Field Research
- Murphy, Getting the Facts
- Johnson, Doing Field Research
- Spradley, Participant Observation
- Rose, Living the Ethnographic Life
- Barley, The Innocent Anthropologist: Notes from a Mud Hut
- Marcus and Fischer, Anthropology as Cultural Critique
- Cohen, "Anthropology and Political Science: Courtship or Marriage,"
pp. 29-48 in Lipset (ed.), Politics and the Social Sciences
- Geer, "First Days in the Field," pp. 372-398 in Hammond (ed.),
Sociologists at Work.
- Golde (ed.), Women in the Field: Anthropological Experiences
(1st and 2nd editions)
- Britan, "Some Problems of Fieldwork in the Federal Bureaucracy,"
Anthropology Quarterly 52 (1979) 211-220.
- Daniels, "Self-Deception and Self-Discovery in Fieldwork," Qualitative
Sociology 6 (1983), 195-214.
- Spencer, "Field Research on Human Service Encounters: Diverse
Solutions to Some Common Problems," 21 Sociological Methods &
Research 372 (1993).
|
|
******* FIRST PAPER DUE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, NOON. ********
|
| 9 Nov. 1
|
NONPARTICIPATING OBSERVATION
- Reading:
- Jorgensen, Participant Observation, pp. 12-52, 82-123.
- Garfinkel,
Studies in Ethnomethodology, chapt. 1-2.
- Karp,
"Observing Behavior in Public Places: Problems and Strategies,"
pp. 82-97 in Shaffir, Stebbins, and Turowetz, Fieldwork Experience:
Qualitative Approaches to Social Research
- Fenno,
"The Political Scientist as Participant Observer," in
Watching Politicians: Essays on Participant Observation
- Fenno,
"U.S. House Members in Their Constituencies," 71 American Political
Science Review 883-917 (1977).
- Gilboy,
"Penetrability of Administrative Systems: Political "Casework" and
Immigration Inspections," 26 Law & Society Review (1992),
273-314.
- Other items of interest:
- Barnard, Research Methods in Cultural Anthropology, chapt.
8.
- Lofland and Lofland, Analyzing Social Settings: A Guide to
Qualitative Observation and Analysis
- Bales, Interaction Process Analysis
- Speier, How to Observe Face-to-Face Communication: A Sociological
Introduction
|
| 10 Nov. 8
|
PARTICIPATING OBSERVATION
- Reading:
- Adler and Adler, Membership Roles in Field Research
- Jorgensen, Participant Observation, pp. 53-81.
- Liebow, Tell Them Who I Am: The Lives of Homeless Women,
pp. vii-xxi, passim.
- Huitt,
"Democratic Party Leadership in the Senate," American
Political Science Review 55 (1961), 333-344.
- Huitt,
"The Outsider in the Senate: An Alternative Role," American
Political Science Review 55 (1961), 566-75.
- Pomper,
"Reviewing Political Science on a Local School Board," PS
24 (1991), pp. 223-225.
- Other items of interest:
- Barnard, Research Methods in Cultural Anthropology, chapt.
7.
- Filstead (ed.), Qualitiative Methodology: Firsthand Involvement
with the Social World
- Becker,
"Problems of Inference and Proof in Participant Observation," 23
American Sociological Review 652-660 (1958).
- Thorne, "Political Activist as Participant Observer:Conflicts
of Commitment in a Study of the Draft Resistance Movement of the
1960s," Symbolic Interaction 2 (1978), 73-88.
- Van Maanen, "Fieldwork on the Beat," pp. 103-151 in Van Maanen,
Dabbs, and Faulker, Varieties of Qualitative Research
|
| 11 Nov. 15
|
SEMI-STRUCTURED AND IN-DEPTH INTERVIEWING
- Reading:
- Spradley, The Ethnographic Interview, pp. 41-172.
- Peabody
et al., "Interviewing Political Elites," 23 PS: Political
Science & Politics 451 (September 1990).
- Dingwall,
"Accounts, Interviews and Observation,"pp. 51-64 in Gale
Miller and Robert Dingwall (eds.), Context and Method in Qualitative
Research.
- Kritzer,
"Stories from the Field: Collecting Data Outside over There."
- Chong,
"How People Think, Reason, and Feel about Rights and Liberties,"
American Journal of Political Science 37 (1993) 867-899.
- Conover,
Crewe, and Searing, "The Nature of Citizenship in the United States
and Great Britain: Empirical Comments on Theoretical Themes," 53
Journal of Politics (1991), 800-832.
- Saegert,
"Unlikely Leaders, Extreme Circumstances: Older Black Women Building
Community Households," 17 American Journal of Community Psychology
295 (1989).
- Other items of interest:
- Harkess and Warren, "The Social Relations of Intensive Interviewing:
Constellations of Strangeness and Science," Sociological Methods
& Research 21 (February 1993), 317-339.
- Douglas, Creative Interviewing
- Rubin and Rubin, Qualitative Interviewing: The Art of Hearing
Data
- Barnard, Research Methods in Cultural Anthropology, chapt.
9.
- Thompson, "Evidence," chapter 4 in The Voice of the Past:
Oral History [2nd Edition]
- Morgan, Focus Groups as Qualitative Research
- Morgan and Spanish, "Focus Groups: A New Tool for Qualitative
Research," Qualitative Sociology 7 (1984), 253-270.
- McCracken, The Long Interview
- Ives, The Tape-recorded Interview: A Manual for Fieldworkers
in Folklore and Oral History (Knoxville, University of Tennessee,
1980).
- Johnson, Selecting Ethnographic Informants
- Converse, Conversations at Random
- Briggs, Learning How to Ask
|
|
******* SECOND PAPER DUE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, NOON *******
|
|
|
| 12 Nov. 19 Monday, Noon
|
BACK FROM THE FIELD: A DISCUSSION WITH POLI SCI 816 ALUMNI
|
PART IV: STYLES OF ANALYSIS
|
|
|
| 13 Nov. 29
|
WORKING WITH QUALITATIVE DATA
- Reading:
- Yin, Case Study Research, pp. 102-153
- Strauss,
Qualitative Analysis for Social Scientists, pp. 55-74, 109-129.
- Miles
and Huberman, Qualitative Data Analysis: A Sourcebook of New
Methods, pp. 215-243.
- Kritzer,
"The Dimensions of Lawyer-Client Relations: Notes toward a Theory
and a Field Study," 1984 American Bar Foundation Research Journal
409.
- Kritzer,
"Interpretation and Validity Assessment in Qualitative Research:
The Case of H.W. Perry's Deciding to Decide," Law and
Social Inquiry 19 (Summer 1994), 687-724.
- Bloch, The Historian's Craft, pp. 138-189.
- Other items of interest:
- Fielding and Fielding, Linking Data
- Strauss and Corbin, Basics of Qualitative Research: Grounded
Theory Procedures and Techniques
- Lincoln and Guba, "Processing Naturalistically Obtained Data,"
in Naturalistic Inquiry, pp. 332-356.
|
| 14 Dec. 6
|
STRATEGIES FOR ANALYSIS: ANALYZING TEXT, TRACING PROCESSES, AND CREATING
NARRATIVES
- Reading:
- Liebow, "Research Methods and Writing," in Tell Them Who I
Am, pp. 319-328.
- Bennett and George, "Process
Tracing in Case Study Research," unpublished paper.
- Levy,
"Producing An Analytic Narrative," pp. 152-172 in John
R. Bowen and Roger Peterson (eds.), Critical Comparisons in Politics
and Culture.
- Couto,
"Narrative, Free Space, and Political Leadership in Social Movements,"
55 Journal of Politics 57-79 (1993)
- Milner,
"Ownership Rights and the Rites of Ownership," 18 Law & Social
Inquiry 227 (1993)
- Other items of interest:
- Atkinson and Heritage, Structures of Social Action: Studies
in Conversational Analysis
- Bates, Greif, Levi, and Laurent, Analytic Narratives
- Ricoeur, "The Model of the Text: Meaningful Action Considered
as a Text," pp. 73-102 in Rabinow & Sullivan (eds.), Interpretive
Social Science: A Reader
- DeVault, "Women's Talk: Feminist Strategies for Analyzing Research
Interviews," Women and Language 10 (Spring 1987), 33-36.
|
|
******* RESEARCH PRACTICUM REPORT DUE WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 12, NOON *******
|
PART V: FINISHING UP
|
|
|
| 15 Dec. 13
|
THINKING BACK: THE LESSONS OF THE RESEARCH PRACTICUM
- Reading:
- "Review Symposium: The Qualitative-Quantitative Disputation: Gary
King, Robert O. Keohane, and Sidney Verba's Designing Social
Inquiry: Scientific Inference in Qualitative Research," American
Political Science Review 89 (June 1995), pp. 454-481. This includes
pieces by Laitin,
Caporaso,
Collier,
Rogowski,
Tarrow,
and a reply by King
et al.
- Kritzer,
"The Data Puzzle: The Nature of Interpretation in Quantitative Research,"
American Journal of Political Science 40 (February 1996),
1-32
- Kritzer,
"'Data, Data, Drowning in Data!' Crafting The Hollow Core,"
21Law & Social Inquiry 21 (1996), 761-804
- Other items of interest:
- Mitchell (ed.), The Politics of Interpretation
- Ricoeur, Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences: Essays on Language,
Action, and Interpretation
- Hookway and Pettit (ed.), Action and Interpretation: Studies
in the Philosophy of the Social Sciences
- Bryman, Quantity and Quality in Social Research
- Simons and Melia (eds.), The Legacy of Kenneth Burke
- Simons (ed.), Rhetoric in the Human Sciences
- Silverman, "Six Rules of Qualitative Research," in Interpreting
Qualitative Data: Methods for Analysing Talk, Text and Interaction,
pp. 196-211.
- McLaughlin, "Oppositional Poverty: The Quantitative/Qualitative
Divide and Other Dichotomies," 39 Sociological Review 292
(May 1991)
|
|
******* RESEARCH PROTOCOL DUE FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21, 4 P.M. ********
|
|
A. GENERAL ISSUES IN NONQUANTITATIVE RESEARCH
- Rabinow & Sullivan, Interpretive Social Science
- Van Maanen, Qualitative Methodology
- Patton, Qualitative Evaluation Methods
- Webb et al., Nonreactive Measures in the Social Sciences
- Glaser and Struss, The Discovery of Grounded Theory: Stategies
for Qualitative Research
|
|
B. CULTURAL ANALYSIS
- Geertz, The Interpretation of Cultures
- Geertz, Local Knowledge
- Merelman, Making Something of Ourselves
- Gibbons (ed.), Contemporary Political Culture: Politics in a Postmodern
Age
|
|
C. "COMPARATIVE THEORIES"
|
| D. ETHNOMETHODOLOGY AND EXISTENTIAL SOCIOLOGY
- Leiter, A Primer on Ethnomethodology
- Garfinkel, Studies in Ethnomethodolgy
- Douglas, Investigative Social Research
- Mehan and Wood, The Reality of Ethnomethodology
- Douglas and Johnson (eds.), Existential Sociology
|
|
E. INSTITUTIONAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL ANALYSIS
- Mohr, Explaining Organizational Behavior
- Hall, Governing the Economy
- Evans, Rueschmeyer, and Skocpol (eds.), Bringing the State Back
In
- Zysman, Governments, Markets, and Growth
- North, Structure and Change in the American Economy
- March
and Olsen, "The New Institutionalism: Organizational Factors in Political
Life," 78 American Political Science Review 734-49 (September
1984).
- Smith,
"Political Jurisprudence, the 'New Institutionalism,' and the Future
of Public Law," 82 American Political Science Review 89-108 (March
1988).
|
- F. LEGAL ANALYSIS
- Mermin, Law & the Legal System
- Smart, The Ties that Bind
- Carter, Reason in Law
- Cardozo, The Nature of the Judicial Process
- Merryman, The Civil Law Tradition
- David, French Law
- Hart, The Concept of Law
- Downs, The Nazis in Skokie
- Cooper, Hard Judicial Choices
- Griffiths, The Politics of the Judiciary
|
|
G. MARXIST RESEARCH METHODS (mostly from references in Rosenau article
listed below)
- Agger, "Dialectical Sensibility," Canadian Journal of Political
and Social Theory 1 (1977), 3-34, 47-56.
- Bodemann, "The Fulfillment of Fieldwork in Marxist Praxis," Dialectical
Anthropology 4 (1979), 151-161.
- Freund & Abrams, "Ethnomethodology and Marxism: Their Use for
Critical Theorizing," Theory and Society 3 (1976), 377-393.
- Levine, Sober, and Wright, "Marxism and Methodological Individualism,"
New Left Review 162 (March/April 1987), 67-84.
- Piccone, "Phenomenological Marxism," Telos 9 (1971), 3-31.
- Roemer, "Mehtodological Individualism and Deductive Marxism," Theory
and Society (July 1982), 513-520.
- Rosenau, "Philosophy, Methodology, and Research: Marxist Assumptions
about Inquiry," Comparative Political Studies 20 (1988), 423-454.
- Sherman, "Dialectics as a Method," Insurgent Socioologist
6[4] (1976), 57-64.
- Sylvan and Glasser, A Rationalist Methodology for the Social Sciences
(1985)
- Sztompka, "Marxism, Functionalism and the Systems Approach," pp.
133-156 in J. Wiatr (ed.), Polish Essays in the Methodology of the
Social Science (1979).
- Szmanski, "Marxism and Science," Insurgent Sociologist 3 (1973),
25-38.
- Ukraintsev, "Marxism-Leninism and Social Science Methods," Social
Sciences 9[3] (1978) 90-113.
- Vaillancourt, When Marxists Do Research (1986)
- Weldes, "Marxims and Methodological Individualism: A Critique," Theory
and Society 18 (1989), 353-386.
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H. FEMINIST METHODOLOGY (taken largely from a bibliography prepared by
Gina Sapiro)
- Alcoff, "Justifying Feminist Social Science," Hypatia: A Journal
of Feminist Philosophy 2 (1987), 107-128.
- Belenky et al., Women's Ways of Knowing: The Development
of Self, Voice, and Mind (1986).
- Billson, "The Progressive Verification Method: Toward a Feminist Methodology
for Studying Women Cross-Culturally,"Women's Studies International
Forum 14 (1991), 201-208.
- Blau, "On the Role of Values in Feminist Scholarship," Signs
3 (1981), 538-540.
- Nielsen (ed.), Feminist Research Methods: Readings from the Social
Sciences (1990).
- Eichler, Nonsexist Research Methods: A Practical Guide (1988).
- Cook and Fonow, "Knowledge and Women's Interests: Issues of Epistemology
and Methodology in Feminist Sociological Research," Sociological
Quarterly (or Sociological Inquiry) 56 (1986), 2-29.
- DeVault, "Women's Talk: Feminist Strategies for Analyzing Research
Interviews," Women and Language 10 (Spring 1987), 33-36.
- DeVault, "Talking and Listening from Women's Standpoint: Feminist
Strategies for Interviewing and Analysis," Social Problems 37
(1990), 701-721.
- Easterday, Papdemas, Schorr, and Valentine, "The Making of a Female
Researcher: Rol.e Problems in Fieldwork," Urban Life 6 (1977),
333-348.
- Eichlker, The Double Standard: A Feminist Critique of Feminist
Social Science (1980).
- Mies, "Women's Research or Feminist Research? The Debate Surrounding
Feminist Science and Methods," pp. 60-84 in Fonow and Cood (eds.), Beyond
Methodology: Feminist Scholarship as Lived Research (1991).
- Fee, "A Feminist Critique of Scientific Objectivity," Science
for the People 14 (1982), 30-33.
- Fonow and Cood (eds.), Beyond Methodology: Feminist Scholarship
as Lived Research (1991).
- Ginzberg, "Uncovering Gynocentric Science," Hypatia: A Journal
of Feminist Philosophy 2 (12987), 89-106.
- Golde (ed.), Women in the Field: Anthropological Experiences
(1st ed., 1970; 2nd ed., 1986)
- Gottlieb and Bombyk, "Strategies for Stengthening Feminist Research,"
Affilia: Journal of Women and Social Work 2 (1987), 99-114.
- Grant,
Ward, and Rong, "Is There an Association between Gender and Methods
in Sociological Research?" American Sociological Review 52 (1987),
856-862.
- Griffiths, "Feminist Research and the Use of Drama," Women's Studies
International Forum 7 (1984), 511-519.
- Harding, The Science Question in Feminism (1986)
- Harding, Feminism and Methodology: Social Science Issues (1987)
- Harding, "The Method Question," Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist
Philosophy 2 (1987), 19-36.
- Hawkesworth, "Beyond Methodological Monism," Women and Politics
7 (1987), 5-10.
- Hekman, "The Feminization of Epistemology: Gender and the Social
Sciences," Women and Politics 7 (1987), 65-84.
- Hubbard, "Science, Facts, and Feminism," Hypatia: A Journal of
Feminist Philosophy 3 (1988), 5-18.
- Juyaratne and Stewart, "Quantitative and Qualitative Methods in the
Socience Sciences: Current Feminist Issues and Practical Strategies,"
pp. 85-106 Fonow and Cood (eds.), Beyond Methodology: Feminist Scholarship
as Lived Research (1991).
- Longino, "Can There Be a Feminist Science?" Hypatia: A Journal
of Feminist Philosophy 2 (1987), 51-64.
- Moore, Feminism and Anthropology (1989)
- Reinharz, Feminist Methods in Social Research (1992).
- Sprague and Zimmerman, "Quality and Quantity: Reconstructing Feminist
Methodology," The American Sociologist 20 (1989), 71-86.
- Warren, Gender Issues in Field Research (1988)
- Westkott, "Feminist Criticism of the Social Sciences," Harvard
Educational Review 49 (1979), 422-430.
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I. PSYCHOANALYTIC APPROACHES
- Erikson, "On the Nature of Psycho-Historical Evidence: In Search of
Gandhi," 97 Daedalus 695 (1968).
- Erikson, Childhood and Society, pp. 189-194, 247-274, 326-358.
- Erikson, Gandhi's Truth
- Erikson, Young Man Luther
- Greenstein, Personality and Politics, pp. 63-93.
- Goodheart, "The Odyssey of Malcom X: An Eriksonian Interpretation,"
52 The Historian 47-62 (1990).
- George & George, Woodrow Wilson and Colonel House
- Lasswell, Psychopathology and Politics, pp. 1-77.
- Wolfenstein, The Revolutionary Personality
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