POLS 545

Qualitative Research Methods

 

Spring 2006 TH 3:30-6:10 DU 466

 

Instructor: Artemus Ward

Office: 410 Zulauf Hall

Office Phone: 815-753-7041

E-mail: aeward@niu.edu

Office Hours: T TH 1:00-2:00pm & by appointment.


Introduction

 

This course is designed to introduce you to the principles and methods of qualitative research. At the beginning of this course, we will examine the place of qualitative research in the field of political science as well as the relationship between qualitative and quantitative methodology. Over the course of the semester, we will examine some of the main methods used by qualitative researchers in the social sciences such as participant observation, interviewing, archival research, and historical analysis. Our examination will consist of readings, both theoretical and applied, and hands-on assignments. This will allow us to not only analyze the comparative strengths and weaknesses of each method, but also gain experience using each approach. It is important to keep in mind, however, that research projects often draw on a number of different data sources, both qualitative and quantitative. Indeed, it is a general rule that research questions should drive the approach and data—not the other way around.

 

This course has several primary objectives. One goal is to familiarize you with the methodological and epistemological debates concerning qualitative research. The second is to give you a number of practical, applied tools during the course of the semester. The third objective is to allow you to practice and implement these tools. The fourth is to read and discuss work by qualitative researchers, especially focusing on the lessons they learned and the challenges they faced. The final goal is to help you understand how to move from project design, to project implementation, to data analysis and reporting.

 

As this is a graduate level Ph.D. course, attendance is assumed. You are required to do the assigned reading and come to class prepared to discuss the material. Because this course is a seminar, I will endeavor to speak as little as possible. You should be prepared to discuss the assigned works in depth, listen to, and respond to the remarks of your colleagues. Class participation is crucial in graduate courses and will account for a substantial part of your course grade. If you miss classes, generally do not come prepared and/or do not regularly participate, you will fail this part of the course.

 

A primary difference in this course versus similar courses in other fields is that you will be expected to begin using these methods during the semester. Your first experience using these methods should NOT be at the dissertation stage. Certainly no one would suggest that your first experience doing quantitative methods should be during your dissertation. Therefore, the best way to understand methods, both quantitative and qualitative, is to practice them, refine them, and discuss them.


 

Course Requirements & Grading

 

Participation: You will earn your participation grade based on frequent quality participation. To earn an A, you must provide quality responses and contributions to the discussion and lectures on a regular basis. By quality, I mean you must demonstrate that you have read and thought about the material for the day’s discussion. Merely debating your classmates for the sake of debating will not substantially add to your grade. Listening is just as important as speaking in graduate seminars. There is a proper balance.

 

Assignments: There will be a number of assignments throughout the semester that require you to implement and analyze various qualitative methods. Your analyses should be thoughtful, specific, and detailed. Always provide example when making arguments. Always be specific. These will be graded and returned to you one to two weeks after they are due.

 

Research Proposal: The course will culminate in a formal proposal, or plan, for future research. The proposal could be an early version of your dissertation or thesis proposal. It could also be a plan for an article, or series of articles you wish to do. The proposal should entail a discussion of your research question, the motivation and background for that question, a brief literature review, your defense of the research methodology, an overview of your project (the sections or chapters you will write and what they will include). You will need to justify your methods using the readings from the course. Similarly, you should anticipate addressing some of the key debates and problems of qualitative research within the paper as well. We will begin this course discussing your ideas and shaping potential research questions. We will then regularly review your progress on the project throughout the semester and assist one another brainstorming on problems and challenges. One week before we begin discussing the proposals, you must provide a copy of your proposal to each student in the class. We will discuss each proposal in class. Be prepared to give a brief “defense” of your proposal (10-15 minutes) and also be prepared to offer feedback on the proposals of your colleagues. The proposal should be no less than ten and no more than twenty, double-spaced pages in length.

 

Participation: 30%

Assignments: 30%

Research Proposal: 40%


 

Assignments

 

Assignment #1: Analyzing Interviewers

To give you an idea of what you can find out in a single interview and what professional interviewing is like in political science, I would like you to listen to and read a sampling of interviews. Please keep in mind that in any research project, you would do a selection of interviews, not just one, and would supplement them with documents, field observation, and any other data you could acquire. Still, these examples will give you a sense of the sparkle and fun of political science interviews. The following are professional interviews, but with different styles, skill levels, and difficulty posed by the situation. Please read each of the interviews assigned on the internet, and answer the relevant questions about them. While you are at each of the websites, you might want to explore them. Certainly give some attention to the purpose of the website, and hence the purpose of the interview. Most of these are only a few pages long. The interviews were chosen to represent a range of topics in political science and variety of interview situations and purposes, as well as a range of styles.

 

A: Recent interview with Defense Secretary Rumsfeld: http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/2005/tr20051216-12175.html

 

B: June 27, 1995 interview with retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun. Read first 20 pages or so of transcript beginning on this day, page 243:

http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cocoon/blackmun-public/page.html?page=243&size=640&SERIESID=D09&FOLDERID=D0901

You can also watch the interview here: http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cocoon/blackmun-public/series.html?ID=D10

 

C: November 15, 2001 interview with Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/1657368.stm

 

D: Interview with Eddie Thomas, Sr., Mississippi civil rights activist who walked picket line in 1972 boycott:

http://www.usm.edu/crdp/html/transcripts/manuscript-thomas_eddie.shtml

 

 

First read or listen to all of these interviews, and prepare a summary comparing the role of the interviewer in each one. Be sure to be specific and provide examples for each answer. Write at least one to two paragraph responses to each question:

 

1)      Aggressiveness: Which interviewer was most aggressive? Which one least aggressive? How were you able to determine aggressiveness? Give examples from the interviews supporting your choices.

2)      Difficulty: Which interview was the most difficult to do? What made it difficult? Be specific about how you determined this by giving examples.

3)      Accommodating: Which interview prompted the best answers? To answer this, you need to look at the questions and then summarize the content of the answers, and look for a match.

4)      Stonewalling: Which interviewer(s) did not get answers to the questions he or she posed? Why not? Be specific about specific interviews and provide specific evidence from the interviews you cite.

5)      Interviewer Skill: Which interviewer was the most skill? What makes you think so? How are you judging skilled? Provide specific examples.

6)      Follow-Up Questions: Please look for follow-up questions and mark them in your downloaded version of the interview if you can download and print them. How skillful are the follow ups? What makes a good follow-up question? Provide specific examples.

7)      Purpose and Style: To what extent does the purpose of the interview influence the style? How did you determine what the purpose was? Again, provide specific examples.

8)      Prior Knowledge: How much knowledge do the interviewers demonstrate? Does knowledge make for better interviews? How can you tell?

9)      Obstacles: What obstacles did the interviewers encounter in these interviews and how did they surmount them, or did they fail to surmount them? Provide specific examples.


 

Assignment #2: Conducting Interviews

Now try your interviewing skills. For this assignment you need to do two interviews on the same subject, preferably with the same person or with two people on the same subject, so you can learn from one interview before doing the next one. The choice of topic and subjects is up to you. However, you may not interview any faculty member in the political science department or division of public administration. Formulate questions on the topic, be sure to listen to the answers, follow up with questions of more depth. Consider whether you want to or are able to record the interview. If so, should also take notes at the same time? Write up and analyze your notes/transcript from interview one before deciding what to ask on interview two. Code, analyze, and write up the results in a brief paper, say about 3 pages. While you may briefly comment on your experiences conducting the interviews and doing the analysis, focus on what you learned from the substance of the interviews. Look for themes, categories, and typologies through coding and simple counting techniques. What tables or charts can you construct? Coded interview transcripts/notes must be included with your mini report. I will be looking for greater depth and understanding from interview two, building from interview one.


 

Assignment #3: Observation

OK, you are ready to start doing some observations and note taking. Find a site where you can observe some activity or interaction, hopefully, but not necessarily related to political science (the skills are the same whether the subject is political or not). You can attend a council meeting or a planning session in DeKalb, a student government meeting on campus, a county board meeting, health board meeting, judicial proceeding, or even observe where you work, particularly if it has something to do with government and politics. Pick a place early, and if you are unsure whether it is appropriate, let me know what it is, so I can be sure that you will see enough to work with. Take notes on as much of what is going on as you can. You can also tape the meeting if that is allowed (usually it is but make sure you check with the appropriate authority in advance). Fill in your notes after the meeting as best you can. Then, analyze your notes through coding and simple counting schemes. Tell me what happened, and what it means, what concepts you can derive from your notes, what themes, what research questions you might want to pursue. Turn in your observation notes, your coding notes, and your analysis. Be sure to use examples from your notes or transcript to prove the points you make in your analysis. Be prepared to discuss your observation experiences in class.


 

Assignment #4: Reading Texts—Conducting Archival/Documentary Research

For this assignment you need to use an archive of unpublished material or published letters or speeches, and use them as raw data to analyze. How many documents you analyze is up to you. You should code them for concepts and themes, analyze the results, and write up your analysis using excerpts and tables to prove your points. Turn in your 3-5 page analysis and coding sheets. The difficulties of this kind of work often lay in selectivity biases, so you have to choose your material and themes carefully to be sure you can answer the questions you pose with some rigor. I do a lot of this kind of analysis and am always running into reviewers who are concerned about replication and falsifiability. Could another researcher replicate your study? Is it possible that the same data could lead to the opposite result? Carefully formulate rival hypotheses and show how you can eliminate them or why your conclusions are stronger or more useful than potential rival hypotheses.

 

There are countless possible sources, of primary material including government websites. Here are a few examples:

·        The United Nations Document Center: http://www.un.org/documents/

·        The United States National Archives: http://www.archives.gov/index.html

·        The Manuscript Division of the United States Library of Congress, housed in the James Madison Building in Washington, D.C. has a wealth of collections. I have spent extended periods of time digging through the fragile papers of government officials in folder after folder and box after box. Yet through the miracle of technology, we can now access entire collections on-line! For example, the complete papers of James Madison—approximately 12,000 items captured in some 72,000 digital images—can be accessed at: http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/madison_papers/. Other digitized collections can be found here: http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/browse/ListSome.php?division=Manuscript+Division

·        The National Archives of the United Kingdom: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/

·        American political party platforms (1840-2004): http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/platforms.php

·        The Papers of Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902) and Susan B. Anthony (1820-1906): http://ecssba.rutgers.edu/index.html


 

Assignment #5: Conducting Historical Institutional Analysis

 

In this assignment you are to identify a political institution or process and conduct a brief historical institutional analysis. Instead of simply recounting the history, or facts, of the institution or process over time, your assignment is to identify the major developments or changes that occurred over time. Try to choose a small, manageable institution or process. An analysis of French foreign policy since the revolution, the U.S. Agriculture Department, or the Cuban Judiciary are all far too broad to tackle for the purposes of this assignment (though they may very well be viable dissertation topics). Instead, think small: French foreign policy toward Germany under Mitterand, U.S. Agriculture Department policy toward small and independent farmers during the Reagan years, and the Cuban Judiciary’s stance toward free speech after the collapse of the Soviet Union. One trick to identifying institutional change is to examine external forces, such as legislative developments. Similarly, internal developments such as rule changes can give rise to larger institutional transformations. Be creative in identifying causal factors. Length: 3-5pp. We will discuss your analysis in class.


 

Required Texts

 

Fenno, Richard F., Watching Politicians: Essays on Participant Observation (Berkeley, CA: Institute of Governmental Studies Press, 1990).

 

Pierson, Paul, Politics in Time: History, Institutions, and Social Analysis (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004).

 

Rubin, Irene, and Herbert J. Rubin, Qualitative Interviewing: The Art of Hearing Data (Sage, 1995).

 

Silverman, David, Interpreting Qualitative Data: Methods for Analyzing Talk, Text and Interaction, 2nd ed. (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 2001).

 

Note: All other required readings for this class can be accessed in one of three ways. Most of the articles will available through the online database JSTOR.  Newly released articles can be accessed though Article First, another database to which the library subscribes. All other readings have been placed on library electronic reserve: http://www.niulib.niu.edu/narnia/pols5ward/pols545.htm


 

Suggested Texts

 

Berg, Bruce, Qualitative Research for the Social Sciences (Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 2001).

 

Cook, Judith A. and Mary M. Fonow, Beyond Methodology: Feminist Scholarship As Lived Research (Indiana: Indiana University Press, 1991).

 

Devault, Marjorie, L., Liberating Method: Feminism and Social Research (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1999).

 

Emerson, Robert M., Rachel I. Fretz, and Linda L. Shaw, Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995).

 

King, Gary, Robert O. Keohane, and Sidney Verba, Designing Social Inquiry (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994).

 

Krueger, Richard A., Analyzing and Reporting Focus Group Results (Sage, 1997).

 

Morgan, David L., Focus Groups as Qualitative Research, 2nd ed. (Sage, 1997).

 

Orren, Karen and Stephen Skowronek, The Search for American Political Development (Cambridge University Press, 2004).

 

Seidman, Irving, Interviewing As Qualitative Research: A Guide for Researchers in Education and the Social Sciences, 2nd ed. (Teachers College Prress, 1998).

 

Silverman, David, Doing Qualitative Research: A Practical Handbook (Sage, 1999).

 

Wolf, Diane L., Feminist Dilemmas in Fieldwork (Westview Press, 1996).


 

Course Calendar

 

Jan 19 Week 1: Course Overview

Introductions, research agendas, and questions. Course Overview.

 


 

Jan 26 Week 2: What is Qualitative Research?

Required:

·        Silverman, Interpreting Qualitative Data, Ch.1 Beginning Research, Ch.2 What is Qualitative Research, Ch.8 Credible Qualitative Research, Ch.9 Relevance and Ethics.

·        Northern Illinois University’s Institutional Review Board (IRB) webpage: http://www.grad.niu.edu/orc/irb_homepage.htm

 

Recommended:

Ø       Dahl, Robert, “The Behavioral Approach to Political Science: An Epitaph for a Monument to a Successful Protest,” American Political Science Review 55 (1961): 763-72.

Ø       Glaser, Barney G. and Anselm L. Strauss, Discovery of Grounded Theory: Strategies for Qualitative Research (Aldine de Gruyter, 1967).

Ø       Almond, Gabriel A. and Stephen J. Genco, “Clouds, Clocks, and the Study of Politics,” World Politics 29 (1977): 489-522.

Ø       King, Gary, Robert Keohane, and Sidney Verba, Designing Social Inquiry (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1994).

Ø       Corbin, Juliet M. and Anselm Strauss, Basics of Qualitative Research: Techniques and Procedures for Developing Grounded Theory, 2nd ed. (Sage, 1998).

Ø      Becker, Howard S., Tricks of the Trade: How to Think About Your Research While You Are Writing It (Chicago: University Press of Chicago, 1998).

 

Questions:

o        In qualitative research, is it better to use the researcher’s categories or the participant’s categories?

o        Can one begin conducting research without a hypothesis?

o        It has been argued that “objectivity” in social science research is “an excuse for a power relationship every bit as obscene as the power relationship that leads women to be sexually assaulted, murdered and otherwise treated as mere objects.” Is this correct?

o        What is triangulation?

o       What ethical obligations do qualitative researchers have?

 

Assignment #1 Due. We will discuss your findings in class.


 

Feb 2 Week 3. Interviews

Required:

·        Rubin, Irene, and Herbert J. Rubin, Qualitative Interviewing: The Art of Hearing Data (Sage, 1995).

·        Silverman, Interpreting Qualitative Data, Ch.4 Interviews.

·        Kathlene, Lyn, “Alternative Views of Crime: Legislative Policymaking in Gendered Terms,” Journal of Politics 57 (1995): 696-723.

 

Recommended:

Ø       Seidman, Irving, Interviewing As Qualitative Research: A Guide for Researchers in Education and the Social Sciences, 2nd ed. (Teachers College Prress, 1998), Ch.6: “Technique isn’t everything, but it is a lot,” Ch.8: “Analyzing, Interpreting, and Sharing Interview Material.”

 

Questions:

o        What is transparency? Is it important in interview research and qualitative research in general?

o        What is the difference between positive and interpretive interviewing? What is constructivist interviewing and how is it different from both positive and interpretive approaches?

o       It is argued that the danger of anectodatlism—reporting “typical” responses, brief extracts, or examples from your interviews—is that they can be used to support a preconceived argument rather than to test it. If this is the case, are the strategies of tabulating many cases and investigating deviant cases helpful in mitigatating these dangers?


 

Feb 9 Week 4. Focus Groups

Required:

·        David L. Morgan, “Focus Groups,” Annual Review of Sociology 22 (1996): 129-52.

·        John Bartle, “Measuring Party Identification: An Exploratory Study with Focus Groups,” Electoral Studies 22 (2003): 217-37.

·        Diane J. Heith, “One for All: Using Focus Groups and Opinion Polls in the George H.W. Bush White House,” Congress & the Presidency 30 (2003): 82-94.

·        Pamela Johnston Conover, Donald D. Searing, and Ivor Crewe, “The Elusive Ideal of Equal Citizenship: Political Theory and Political Psychology in the United States and Great Britain,” Journal of Politics 66 (2004): 1036-68.

 

Questions:

o        Must focus groups have structured question formats?

o        Should focus groups be supplemented with other research methods?

o       To what extent did these authors succeed or fail to be transparent in describing their methodology? Will other researchers be able to replicate their studies?

 

Assignment #2 Due. We will discuss your findings in class.


 

Feb 16 Week 5. Ethnography and Participant Observation

Required:

·        Silverman, Interpreting Qualitative Data, Ch.3. Ethnography and Observation

·        Fenno, Richard, Watching Politicians: Essays on Participant Observation (Berkeley: Institute of Governmental Studies, 1990).

·        Bayard de Volo, Lorraine, and Edward Schatz, “From the Inside Out: Ethnographic Methods in Political Research,” PS: Political Science & Politics 37 (2004): 267-71.

 

Recommended:

Ø       Emerson, Robert M., Rachel I. Fretz, and Linda L. Shaw, Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995).

Ø       Geertz, Clifford, The Interpretation of Cultures (New York: Basic Books, 1973).

Ø      Stewart, Alex, The Ethnographer’s Method (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1998).

 

Questions:

o        Is it useful to distinguish between observation and participant observation?

o        Is Fenno’s method observation, participant observation, or something else?

o        Is there ever a point, ethically or otherwise, when an observer should become a participant observer?

o       What is the relationship between observation (or participant observation) and interviews?


 

Feb 23 Week 6. Feminist Scholarship

Required:

·        Cook, Judith A. and Mary M. Fonow, Beyond Methodology: Feminist Scholarship as Lived Research (Indiana University Press, 1991).

o       Ch.2. Kathryn Payne Addelson, “The Man Of Professional Wisdom,” 16-34;

o       Ch.3. Patricia Hill Collins, “Learning From The Outsider Within: The Sociological Significance of Black Feminist Thought,” 35-59;

o       Ch.5. Toby Epstein Jayaratne and Abigail J. Stewart, “Quantitative and Qualitative Methods in the Social Sciences: Current Feminist Issues and Practical Strategies,” 85-106;

o       Ch.6. Lynn Weber Cannon, Elizabeth Higginbotham, and Marianne L.A. Leung, “Race and Class Bias In Qualitative Research on Women,” 107-18.

 

Recommended:

Ø       Berg, Bruce. Ch.7 “Action Research,” Qualitative Methods for the Social Sciences (Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 2001).

Ø       Spalter-Roth, Roberta and Heidi Hartmann, “Small Happiness: The Feminist Struggle to Integrate Social Research with Social Activism” in Sharlene Hesse-Biber, Feminist Approaches to Theory and Methodology: An Interdisciplinary Reader (New York: Oxford Press, 1999).

Ø      Devault, Marjorie, L., Liberating Method: Feminism and Social Research (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1999).

 

Questions:

o        How is Kathryn Payne Addelson’s argument related to Thomas Kuhn’s The Structure of Scientific Revolutions?

o        What does Kathryn Payne Addelson mean when she discusses “conventional understandings” by “significant communicators”? Is this a useful way of thinking about political science?

o        According to Patricia Hill Collins, what is “outsider within” status and how might it be useful for political science?

o        What is Black feminist thought and how is it related to research methods?

o        According to Jayaratne and Stewart , are quantitative methods antithetical to feminist research?

o        According to Jayaratne and Stewart, is “objective” research necessary if researchers are to have an effect on public policy?

o        According to Cannon, et. al., what are the consequences of failing to account for such respondent characteristics as race and class in qualitative research designs?

o       How can qualitative researchers make sure that race, class, and other demographic variables are incorporated into their research designs?

 

Assignment 3 Due. We will discuss your findings in class.


 

Mar 2 Week 7. Narratives

Required:

·        Patterson, Molly and Kristen Renwick Monroe, “Narrative in Political Science,” Annual Review of Political Science 1 (1998): 315-31

·        Stivers, Camilla, “Reflections on the Role of Personal Narrative in Social Science,” Signs 18 (1993): 408-25.

·        Buthe, Tim, “Taking Temporality Seriously: Modeling History and the Use of Narratives as Evidence,” American Political Science Review 96 (2002): 481-93.

·        Herzog, Richard J. and Ronald G. Claunch, “Stories Citizens Tell and How Administrators Use Types of Knowledge,” Public Administration Review 57 (1997): 374-9.

 

Recommended:

Ø       Bates, Robert, Avner Grief, Margaret Levi, Jean-Laurent Rosenthal, and Barry Weingast, Analytical Narratives (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1998).

Ø       Somers, MR, and GD Gibson, “Reclaiming the epistemological ‘other’: narrative and the social constitution of identity,” in Social Theory and the Politics of Identity, ed. C Calhoun (Oxford, UK: Blackwell, 1994), 35-99.

Ø       Polkinghorne, Donald E., Narrative Knowing and the Human Sciences (Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 1988).

 

Questions:

o        What is the difference between narratives and unstructured interviewing?

o        How are narratives related to post-structuralism and postmodernism?

o        How are narratives related to paradigms?

o        Why is history particularly important in social science/political science narrative analysis?

o        Why do many social scientists find narratives objectionable as a methodological too?

o        According to Patterson and Monroe, why are exclusions, omissions, pauses, and silences important in narrative analysis?

o        According to Stivers, what is the relationship between positivism and paradigms?

o        How does Stivers’ critique of positivism relate to narrative analysis?

o       According to Stivers, is there no such thing as Truth? What is the difference between Truth and agreement?

o       What is the relationship between narrative and ethnography?

o       According to Stivers, is there a difference between fact and fiction, between history and literature, between science and art? What is an autobiography? What is a memoir?

o       According to Stivers, what is the role of critique in social science?

o       Based on the typology provided by Somers & Gibson, as discussed in Patterson and Monroe, which of the four separate kinds of narratives is Büthe suggesting be used is historical research?

o       How does Büthe define “history”?

o       According to Büthe, how is it possible and why is it desirable to model history?

o       Why does Büthe think that narratives are especially useful in testing models about historical processes? And how does he propose narratives be used to do this?

o       According to Büthe, what is the difference between using multiple narratives and alternative narratives? Which technique should researchers employ?

o       What is the “boundary” problem in research, and particularly in historical studies? How does the researcher overcome it?

o       What does Büthe say is the relationship between history and Truth?

o       From where do Herzog and Claunch derive the “seven categories of knowledge” they discuss?

o       What is “garbage knowledge” as discussed by Herzog and Claunch? Is this information useful to policymakers? Researchers? Does garbage knowledge bear any relationship to Patterson and Monroe’s discussion of omissions and exclusions in narratives?

o       How did Herzog and Claunch derive manager responses to the citizen data?

o       Did the researchers, Herzog and Claunch, have any effect on the behavior of the city managers?

 

Discuss work-in-progress on Assignment 4.


 

Mar 9 Week 8. Reading Texts and Visual Images

Required:

·        Silverman, Interpreting Qualitative Data: Ch. 5 Texts, Ch. 6 Naturally Occuring Talk, Ch. 7 Visual Images.

·        Peregrine Schwartz-Shea & Dvora Yanow, “‘Reading’ ‘Methods’ ‘Texts’: How Research Methods Texts Construct Political Science,” Political Research Quarterly 55 (2002): 457-86.

 

Recommended:

Ø       Coffey, Amanda and Paul Atkinson, Making Sense of Qualitative Data (London: Sage, 1996).

Ø       McKee, Alan, Textual Analysis: A Beginner’s Guide (London: Sage, 2003).

Ø       Emmison, Michael and Phillip Smith, Researching the Visual: Images, Objects, Contexts and Interactions in Social and Cultural Inquiry (London: Sage, 2000).

Ø      Rose, Gillian, Visual Methodologies : An Introduction to the Interpretation of Visual Materials (London: Sage, 2001).

 

Questions:

o       According to Silverman, what is the difference between content analysis and other forms of textual analysis?

o       What is a “membership categorization device” (MCD)?

o       Is there a difference between researcher-provoked data and naturally occurring talk?

o       What is the difference between working from a transcript versus the actual recording?

o       What is conversation analysis (CA)? Is it different from interviewing?

o       What is discourse analysis (DA)? What is its relationship to CA?

o       What are “stakes” and “scripts”?

o       Is analysis of visual images preferable to text?

o       What is semiotics and how is it used in the analysis of visuals?

o       What is the difference between denotation and connotation in visual analysis?

o       How is MCD related to visual analysis?

o       According to Schwartz-Shea and Yanow, how are research methods texts constructed?

 

Exercise: In class we will do a textual analysis. I will provide the text.


 

Mar 16 Week 9. Spring Break

 


 

Mar 23 Week 10. Case Studies

Required:

·        Lijphart, Arend, “The Comparable-Cases Strategy in Comparative Research,” Comparative Political Studies, 8 (1975): 158-77.

·        Victoria E. Bonnell, “The Uses of Theory, Concepts and Comparison in Historical Sociology,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 22 (1980): 154-73.

·        Theda Skocpol and Margaret Somers, “The Uses of Comparative History in Macrosocial Inquiry,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 22 (1980): 174-97.

·        Elizabeth Nichols, “Skocpol on Revolution: Comparative Analysis vs. Historical Conjuncture,” Comparative Social Research 9 (1986) 163-86.

·        Theda Skocpol, “Analyzing Causal Configurations in History: A Rejoinder to Nichols,” Comparative Social Research 9 (1986) 187-94.

·        David Collier and James E. Mahon, Jr., “Conceptual ‘Stretching’ Revisited: Adapting Categories in Comparative Analysis,” American Political Science Review 87 (1993): 845-55.

·        Gerring, John, “What is a Case Study and What Is It Good for?” American Political Science Review 98 (2004): 341-54.

 

Recommended:

Ø       Campbell, Donald T., “‘Degrees of Freedom’ and the Case Study,” Comparative Political Studies 8 (1975): 178-93.

Ø       Coppedge, Michael, “Thickening Thin Concepts and Theories: Combining Large N and Small in Comparative Politics,” Comparative Politics 31 (1999): 465-76.

Ø       Odell, John S., “Case Study Methods in International Political Economy,” International Studies Perspectives 2 (2001): 161-76.

Ø       Chwieroth, Jeffrey M., “Counterfactuals and the Study of the American Presidency,” Presidential Studies Quarterly 32 (2002): 293-327.

Ø       Mahoney, James and Gary Goertz, “The Possibility Principle: Choosing Negative Cases in Comparative Research,” American Political Science Review 98 (2004): 653-69.

Ø       Sekhon, Jasjeet S., “Quality Meets Quantity: Case Studies, Conditional Probability, and Counterfactuals,” Perspectives on Politics 2 (2004): 281-93.

Ø      Pahre, Robert, “Formal Theory and Case-Study Methods in EU Studies,” European Union Politics 6 (2005): 113-46.

 

Assignment #4 Due. Be prepared to discuss your experiences in class.


 

Mar 30 Week 11. History and Time as Method I

·        Pierson, Paul, Politics in Time: History, Institutions, and Social Analysis (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004).

 

Recommended:

·         Skocpol, Theda, States and Social Revolutions (Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press, 1979).

·        Robertson, David Brian, “The Return to History and the New Institutionalism in American Political Science,” Social Science History 17 (1993): 1-36.

·        Hall, Peter A. and Rosemary C.R. Taylor, “Political Science and the Three New Institutionalisms,” Political Studies 44 (1996): 936-57.

·        Immergut, Ellen, “The Theoretical Core of the New Institutionalism,” Politics & Society 26 (1998): 5-34.

·        Thelen, Kathleen, “Historical Institutionalism in Comparative Perspective,” Annual Review of Political Science 2 (1999): 369-404.

 

Discuss work-in-progress on Assignment #5.


 

Apr 6 Week 12. History and Time as Method II

·        Lustick, Ian S., “History, Historiography, and Political Science: Multiple Historical Records and the Problems of Selection Bias,” American Political Science Review 90 (1996): 605-18.

·        Thies, Cameron G., “A Pragmatic Guide to Qualitative Historical Analysis in the Study of International Relations,” International Studies Perspectives 3 (2002): 351-72.

 

Assignment #5 Due. Students should be prepared to briefly discuss their assignment. You may want to bring handouts/overheads and/or use the board to explain your analysis. We will continue discussing the assignments the following week.


 

Apr 13 Week 13. Interpreting Qualitative Data

Required:

·        Silverman, Interpreting Qualitative Data, Ch. 9 Relevance and Ethics, Ch. 10 The Potential of Qualitative Research: Eight Reminders

 

Recommended:

Ø       Wolcott, Harry F., Writing Up Qualitative Research, 2nd ed. (Sage: 2001).

Ø       Huberman, Michael and Matthew Miles, Qualitative Data Analysis: An Expanded Sourcebook, 2nd ed. (Sage 1994).

Ø      Creswell, John, Qualitative Inquiry and Research Design (Sage: 1998).

 

Final Research Proposals Due. Everyone must print out 20 copies of their final research proposals and bring them to distribute to everyone in the class. We will begin discussing these the following week.

 

Continue discussion of Assignment #5.


 

Week 14. Apr. 20. No Class. Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago.


 

Week 15. Apr. 27. Presentations/Discussion of Research Proposals

Required: Read final research proposals: last names beginning with the letters M-Z. Be prepared to ask questions and provide comments.

 

Due: Students with last names beginning with the letters M-Z will very briefly (5-10 min) discuss their research proposal.


Week 16. May 4. Presentations/Discussion of Research Proposals

Required: Read final research proposals: last names beginning with the letters A-N. Be prepared to ask questions and provide comments.

 

Due: Students with last names beginning with the letters A-N will very briefly (5-10 min) discuss their research proposal.


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