Box-Steffensmeier / Brady / Collier | OHB POLITICAL METHODOLOGY OHBK C | Buch | 978-0-19-928654-6 | www2.sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 896 Seiten, Format (B × H): 175 mm x 250 mm, Gewicht: 1693 g

Box-Steffensmeier / Brady / Collier

OHB POLITICAL METHODOLOGY OHBK C


Erscheinungsjahr 2008
ISBN: 978-0-19-928654-6
Verlag: ACADEMIC

Buch, Englisch, 896 Seiten, Format (B × H): 175 mm x 250 mm, Gewicht: 1693 g

ISBN: 978-0-19-928654-6
Verlag: ACADEMIC


Political methodology has changed dramatically in the past thirty years. Not only have new methods and techniques been developed, but the Political Methodology Society and the Qualitative Methods Section of the American Political Science Association have engaged in ongoing research and training programs that have advanced both quantitative and qualitative methodology. The Oxford Handbook of Political Methodology is designed to reflect these developments.It provides comprehensive overviews and critiques of all the key specific methodologies.

The volume emphasises three things. Firstly, techniques should be the servants of improved data collection, measurement, conceptualization, and the understanding of meanings and the identification of causal relationship in social science research. Techniques will be described with the aim of showing how they contribute to these tasks, and the emphasis will be upon developing good research designs-not upon simply using sophisticated techniques.

Second, there are many different ways that these tasks can be undertaken in the social sciences through description and modeling, case-study and large-n designs, and quantitative and qualitative research.

Third, techniques can cut across boundaries and be useful for many different kinds of researchers. The chapter authors ask how their methods can be used by, or at least inform, the work of those outside those areas where they are usually employed. For example, those describing large-n statistical techniques should ask how their methods might at least inform, if not sometimes be adopted by, those doing case studies or interpretive work, and we want those explaining how to do comparative historical work or process tracing to explain how it could inform those doing time-series studies.

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Weitere Infos & Material


- Part I: Introduction

- 1: Janet Box-Steffensmeier, Henry Brady, David Collier: Political Science Methodology

- 2: Russell Hardin: Normative Methodology

- Part II: Approaches to Social Science Methodology

- 3: Mark Bevir: Meta-methodology: Clearing the Underbrush

- 4: Scott de Marchi and Scott E. Page: Agent-based Modeling

- Part III: Concepts and Measurement

- 5: Gary Goertz: Concepts, Theories, and Numbers: A Checklist for Constructing, Evaluating, and Using Concepts or Quantitative Measures

- 6: Simon Jackman: Measurement

- 7: David Collier, Jody LaPorte, and Jason Seawright: Typologies: Forming Concepts and Creating Catagorical Variables

- 8: Charles C. Ragin: Measurement versus Calibration: A Set-theoretic Approach

- 9: Keith T. Poole: The Evolving Influence of Psychometrics in Political Science

- Part IV: Causality and Explanation in Social Research

- 10: Henry E. Brady: Causation and Explanation in Social Science

- 11: Jasjeet S.Sekhon: The Neyman-Rubin Model of Causal Inference and Estimation via Matching Methods

- 12: David A. Freedman: On Types of Scientific Enquiry: The Role of Qualitative Reasoning

- 13: Peter Hedstrom: Studying Mechanisms to Strengthen Causal Inferences in Quantitative Research

- Part V: Experiments, Quasi-experiments and Natural Experiments

- 14: Rebecca B. Morton and Kenneth C. Williams: Experimentation in Political Science

- 15: Alan S. Gerber and Donald P. Green: Field Experiments and Natural Experiments

- Part VI: Quantitative Tools for Descriptive and Causal Inference: General Methods

- 16: Richard Johnston: Survey Methodology

- 17: John E. Jackson: Endogeneity and Structural Equation Estimation in Political Science

- 18: Kenneth A. Bollen, Sophia Rabe-Hesketh, and Anders Skrondal: Structural Equation Models

- 19: Jon C. Pevehouse and Jason D. Brozek: Time-series Analysis

- 20: Nathaniel Beck: Time-series Cross-section Methods

- 21: Andrew D. Martin: Bayesian Analysis

- Part VII: Quantitative Tools for Descriptive and Causal Inference: Special Topics

- 22: Garrett Glasgow and R. Michael Alvarez: Discrete Choice Methods

- 23: Jonathan Golub: Survival Analysis

- 24: Wendy K. Tam Cho and Charles F. Manski: Cross-level/Ecological Inference

- 25: Robert J. Franzese Jr, and Jude C. Hays: Empirical Models of Spatial Interdependence

- 26: Bradford S. Jones: Multilevel Models

- Part VIII: Qualitative Tools for Descriptive and Causal Inference

- 27: Jack S. Levy: Counterfactuals and Case Studies

- 28: John Gerring: Case Selection for Case-study Analysis: Qualitative and Quantitative Techniques

- 29: Brian C. Rathbun: Interviewing and Qualitative Field Methods: Pragmatism and Practicalities

- 30: Andrew Bennett: Process Tracing: A Bayesian Perspective

- 31: Benoit Rihoux: Case-oriented Configurational Research: Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA), Fuzzy Sets, and Related Techniques

- 32: James Mahoney and P. Larkin Terrie: Comparative-historical Analysis in Contemporary Political Science

- 33: James D. Fearon and David D. Laitin: Integrating Qualitative and Quantitative Methods

- Part IX: Organizations, Institutions, and Movements in the Field of Methodology

- 34: David Collier and Colin Elman: Qualitative and Multimethod Research: Organizations, Publication, and Reflections on Integration

- 35: Charles H. Franklin: Quantitative Methodology

- 36: Michael S. Lewis-Beck: Forty Years of Publishing in Quantitative Methodology

- 37: John H. Aldrich, James E. Alt, and Arthur Lupia: The EITM Approach: Origins and Interpretations

- Index


Janet Box-Steffensmeier is the Vernal Riffe Professor of Political Science, Director of the Program in Statistics and Methodology, and courtesy faculty of Sociology at the Ohio State University. She holds a B.A. in mathematics and political science from Coe College (1988), and a Ph.D. in political science from the University of Texas at Austin (1993).

Henry Brady is Professor of Political Science and Public Policy at UC Berkeley. He received his Ph.D. in Economics and Political Science from MIT in 1980. His areas of interest include Quantitative Methodology, American and Canadian Politics, and Political Behavior. He teaches undergraduate courses on political participation and party systems and graduate courses on advanced quantitative methodology.

David Collier is Professor of Political Science at UC BerkeleyProfessor. His fields are comparative politics, Latin American politics, and methodology. His latest book is Rethinking Social Inquiry: Diverse Tools, Shared Standards (Rowman & Littlefield, 2004), of which he is co-editor and co-author with his Berkeley colleague Henry E. Brady.



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