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Handbook of Research Methods and Applications in Political Science
Edited by Hans Keman and Jaap J. Woldendorp
This Handbook offers a comprehensive overview of state-of-the-art research methods and applications currently in use in political science. It combines theory and methodology (qualitative and quantitative), and offers insights into the major approaches and their roots in the philosophy of scientific knowledge. Including a comprehensive discussion of the relevance of a host of digital data sources, plus the dos and don’ts of data collection in general, the book also explains how to use diverse research tools and highlights when and how to apply these techniques.
Handbook
- Published in print:
- 30 Dec 2016
- ISBN:
- 9781784710811
- eISBN:
- 9781784710828
- Pages:
- c 576
Show Summary Details
- Handbook of Research Methods and Applications in Political Science
- Copyright
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: Political science: researching a multifaceted topic in essentially contested ways
- Chapter 2: Epistemology and approaches: logic, causation and explanation
- Chapter 3: Taking critical ontology seriously: implications for political science methodology
- Chapter 4: Relating theory and concepts to measurements: bridging the gap
- Chapter 5: On time and space: the historical dimension in political science
- Chapter 6: Systems theory: the search for a general theory of politics
- Chapter 7: Applying multilevel governance
- Chapter 8: Regime types: measuring democracy and autocracy
- Chapter 9: Institutional analysis: progress and problems
- Chapter 10: Political actors: parties–interest groups–government
- Chapter 11: Social movements and political action
- Chapter 12: International relations and transnational politics
- Chapter 13: Political economy: economic miracles and socio-economic performance
- Chapter 14: Political theory and its normative methods
- Chapter 15: Organizing and developing data sets: exemplified by the Party Government Data Set
- Chapter 16: Political institutions
- Chapter 17: Studying voting behavior
- Chapter 18: The role of high-quality surveys in political science research
- Chapter 19: Quantitative data analysis in political science
- Chapter 20: Models in political science: forms and purposes
- Chapter 21: Qualitative methods in political science
- Chapter 22: Multilevel regression analysis
- Chapter 23: Studying how policies affect the people: grappling with measurement, causality and the macro–micro divide
- Chapter 24: Regression analysis
- Chapter 25: Configurational comparative methods (QCA and fuzzy sets): complex causation in cross-case analysis
- Chapter 26: Discourse analysis, social constructivism and text analysis: a critical overview
- Chapter 27: Case study analysis
- Chapter 28: Cluster analysis
- Chapter 29: The logic of process tracing: contributions, pitfalls and future directions
- Chapter 30: Political science research and its political relevance
- Chapter 31: What’s methodology got to do with it? Public policy evaluations, observational analysis and RCTs
- Chapter 32: Re-analysis, testability and falsification
- Chapter 33: The art of publishing: how to report and submit your findings
- Index
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Acknowledgements
Handbook Chapter
- Published:
- 30 December 2016
- Pages:
- xx (1 total)
Collection:
Social and Political Science 2016
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- Handbook of Research Methods and Applications in Political Science
- Copyright
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: Political science: researching a multifaceted topic in essentially contested ways
- Chapter 2: Epistemology and approaches: logic, causation and explanation
- Chapter 3: Taking critical ontology seriously: implications for political science methodology
- Chapter 4: Relating theory and concepts to measurements: bridging the gap
- Chapter 5: On time and space: the historical dimension in political science
- Chapter 6: Systems theory: the search for a general theory of politics
- Chapter 7: Applying multilevel governance
- Chapter 8: Regime types: measuring democracy and autocracy
- Chapter 9: Institutional analysis: progress and problems
- Chapter 10: Political actors: parties–interest groups–government
- Chapter 11: Social movements and political action
- Chapter 12: International relations and transnational politics
- Chapter 13: Political economy: economic miracles and socio-economic performance
- Chapter 14: Political theory and its normative methods
- Chapter 15: Organizing and developing data sets: exemplified by the Party Government Data Set
- Chapter 16: Political institutions
- Chapter 17: Studying voting behavior
- Chapter 18: The role of high-quality surveys in political science research
- Chapter 19: Quantitative data analysis in political science
- Chapter 20: Models in political science: forms and purposes
- Chapter 21: Qualitative methods in political science
- Chapter 22: Multilevel regression analysis
- Chapter 23: Studying how policies affect the people: grappling with measurement, causality and the macro–micro divide
- Chapter 24: Regression analysis
- Chapter 25: Configurational comparative methods (QCA and fuzzy sets): complex causation in cross-case analysis
- Chapter 26: Discourse analysis, social constructivism and text analysis: a critical overview
- Chapter 27: Case study analysis
- Chapter 28: Cluster analysis
- Chapter 29: The logic of process tracing: contributions, pitfalls and future directions
- Chapter 30: Political science research and its political relevance
- Chapter 31: What’s methodology got to do with it? Public policy evaluations, observational analysis and RCTs
- Chapter 32: Re-analysis, testability and falsification
- Chapter 33: The art of publishing: how to report and submit your findings
- Index