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The SAGE Handbook of Social Science Methodology
Edited by:
- William Outhwaite - University of Newcastle, UK
- Stephen Turner - University of South Florida, USA
Courses:
SAGE Research Handbooks
SAGE Research Handbooks
November 2007 | 640 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
"This timely collection maps developments and explores new territories to meet the challenges and bring about possibilities for social science inquiries."
—CHOICE
The text is divided into 7 sections:
- Overviews of methodological approaches in the social sciences
- Cases, comparisons, and theory
- Quantification and experiment
- Rationality, complexity and collectivity
- Interpretation, critique and postmodernity
- Discourse construction
- Engagement
Edited by two leading figures in the field, The SAGE Handbook of Social Science Methodology is a landmark work in the field of research methods. More than just a 'cookbook' that teaches readers how to master techniques, it will give social scientists in all disciplines an appreciation for the full range of methodological debates today, from the quantitative to the qualitative, giving them deeper and sharpen insights into their own research questions. It will generate debate, solutions, and a series of questions for researchers to exploit and develop in their research and teaching.
PART ONE: OVERVIEWS
William Outhwaite
Introduction
Peter Manicas
The Social Sciences since World War II
Julie Thompson Klein
Interdisciplinary Approaches in Social Science Research
PART TWO: CASES, COMPARISONS AND THEORY
William Outhwaite
Introduction
Jon Mitchell
Ethnography
Charles C Ragin
Comparative Methods
John R Hall
Historicity and Sociohistorical Research
Jennifer Platt
Case Study
PART THREE: QUALIFICATION AND EXPERIMENT
Stephen Turner
Introduction
David Freedman
Statistical Models for Causation
Leslie Hayduk and Hannah Pazderka-Robinson
Fighting to Understand the World Causally
Sandra Schneider
Experimental and Quasi-Experimental Designs in Behavioral Research
Murray Webster Jr and Jane Sell
Theory and Experimentation in Social Sciences
David Howell
The Treatment of Missing Data
Thad Dunning and David Freedman
Modeling Selection Effects
David Freedman and Ken Wachter
Methods for Census 2000 and Statistical Adjustments
Margo Anderson
Quantitative History
PART FOUR: RATIONALITY, COMPLEXITY, COLLECTIVITY
William Outhwaite
Introduction
Donald P Green and Justin Fox
Rational Choice Theory
David Henderson
Rationality and Rationalist Approaches in the Social Sciences
Thomas Schwinn
Individual and Collective Agency
R Keith Sawyer
Simulating Complexity
Maureen O'Malley
Evolutionary Approaches in the Social Sciences
PART FIVE: INTERPRETATION, CRITIQUE AND POSTMODERNITY
William Outhwaite
Introduction
Hans-Herbert Kögler
Understanding and Interpretation
Mark J Smith and Piya Pangsapa
New Controversies in Phenomenology
Doug Kellner and Tyson Lewis
Liberal Humanism and the European Critical Tradition
Adele Clarke
Grounded Theory
Ben Agger
Does Postmodernism Make You Mad? Or, Did You Flunk Statistics?
PART SIX: DISCOURSE CONSTRUCTION
Stephen Turner
Introduction
Ken Gergen and Mary Gergen
Social Construction and Research Methodology
Ricca Edmondson
Rhetorics of Social Science
Michael Lynch
Discourse Analysis
PART SEVEN: EVALUATION, ENGAGEMENT, AND COLLABRATIVE RESEARCH
Stephen Turner
Introduction
Michael Scriven
Evaluation Research
Susan Hekman
Feminist Methodology
Nancy Naples
Feminist Methodology and Its Discontents
Michael Root
Community Based Research
Norman Denzin and Kathryn E Ryan
Qualitative Methodology (Including Focus Groups)
John Law
Making a Mess with Method