Case-based methods have a long history in the social sciences. They are extensively used and raise many practical and theoretical questions. This book provides a comprehensive, critical examination of case-oriented research. It offers concrete proposals about the best research methods and provides an unparalleled guide to the emergence and complexity of the field. The Handbook: - Situates the reader in the essential theoretical and practical issues; - Demonstrates the unity and diversity of case-oriented research through an examination of case-based methods; - Distinguishes between case-based and case study research; - Elucidates the philosophical issues around case based methods; - Examines case-based work in the context of both social theory and theories of research methods.
Read More
Specifications
Dimensions
Height
246 mm
Length
174 mm
Weight
1170 gr
Book Details
Title
The SAGE Handbook of Case-Based Methods
Imprint
SAGE Publications Inc
Product Form
Hardcover
Publisher
SAGE Publications Inc
Genre
Social Science
Source Type
N
ISBN13
9781412930512
Book Category
Social Science Books
BISAC Subject Heading
SOC024000
Book Subcategory
Sociology and Anthropology Books
ISBN10
9781412930512
Language
English
Contributors
Author Info
The primary goal of Charles Ragin, social scientist and innovative methodologist, is to develop methods that help students and researchers unravel causal complexity in their research. This has led to his developing and championing the use of set-theoretic methods in the social sciences, most notably, his Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) and fuzzy set analysis. In a recent review article in Contemporary Sociology entitled "The Ragin Revolution" (Vaisey review), sociologist Stephen Vaisey describes Ragin's work as a "principled alternative" to quantitative analysis (which assumes away casual complexity) and qualitative case-based methods (which lack tools for generalizing across cases.) Many who have adopted Ragin's methods believe that these techniques combine the strength of both quantitative and qualitative methods, while transcending their limits.