Research Catalog
Designing social inquiry : scientific inference in qualitative research
- Title
- Designing social inquiry : scientific inference in qualitative research / Gary King, Robert O. Keohane, Sidney Verba.
- Author
- King, Gary.
- Publication
- Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, [1994], ©1994.
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Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
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Not available - Please for assistance. | Text | Request in advance | H61 .K5437 1994 | Off-site |
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- Additional Authors
- Description
- xi, 245 pages; 25 cm
- Summary
- At a moment when acute disagreement among scholars over the appropriateness of qualitative and quantitative research methods threatens to undermine the validity and coherence of the social sciences, Gary King, Robert Keohane, and Sidney Verba have written a timely and far-sighted book that develops a unified approach to valid descriptive and causal inference. They illuminate the logic of good quantitative and good qualitative research designs and demonstrate that the two do not fundamentally differ.
- Designing Social Inquiry focuses on improving qualitative research, where numerical measurement is either impossible or undesirable. What are the right questions to ask? How should you define and make inferences about causal effects? How can you avoid bias? How many cases do you need, and how should they be selected? What are the consequences of unavoidable problems in qualitative research, such as measurement error, incomplete information, or omitted variables? What are proper ways to estimate and report the uncertainty of your conclusions?
- How would you know if you were wrong?
- Designing Social Inquiry focuses on research in political science, but the authors' analyses apply much more widely. A political scientist conducting a small number of intensive case studies of Eastern European states; a sociologist interested in discovering the causes of social revolution; an education scholar conducting in-depth interviews of teachers in face-to-face settings; an anthropologist participating in and observing a newly discovered subculture; a lawyer studying the deterrent effects of capital punishment - these, and many other scholars and professionals in the social sciences, will come to rely on Designing Social Inquiry as an incomparable sourcebook on the logic and design of research.
- Subject
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references (p. [231]-238) and index.
- Contents
- 1. The Science in Social Science -- 2. Descriptive Inference -- 3. Causality and Causal Inference -- 4. Determining What to Observe -- 5. Understanding What to Avoid -- 6. Increasing the Number of Observations.
- ISBN
- 0691034702 (cloth : alk. paper) :
- 0691034710 (pbk. : alk. paper) :
- LCCN
- 93039283
- OCLC
- 29225092
- ocm29225092
- Owning Institutions
- Columbia University Libraries