Journal Article10.1080/07388940701860318
Case Studies: Types, Designs, and Logics of Inference:
TL;DR: A typology of case studies based on their purposes is constructed, including idiographic, hypothesis-generating, hypotheses-testing, and plausibility probe case studies, and the issue of selection bias and the “single logic” debate is addressed.
read more
Abstract: I focus on the role of case studies in developing causal explanations. I distinguish between the theoretical purposes of case studies and the case selection strategies or research designs used to advance those objectives. I construct a typology of case studies based on their purposes: idiographic (inductive and theory-guided), hypothesis-generating, hypothesis-testing, and plausibility probe case studies. I then examine different case study research designs, including comparable cases, most and least likely cases, deviant cases, and process tracing, with attention to their different purposes and logics of inference. I address the issue of selection bias and the “single logic” debate, and I emphasize the utility of multi-method research.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Natural Embeddedness, Place Attachment, and Local Opposition to Developmental Projects: A Polanyian Analysis of the Origins of Preemptive Environmental Protests in China
Jian Lu
TL;DR: The origins of preemptive environmental protests in China are rooted in the natural embeddedness of local ecology in the social context, leading to place attachment and unified cross-class action against developmental projects.
The importance of cultural and social proximity for the cross-border impacts of terrorist attacks
Olaf Knoester,Thijs van Dooremalen +1 more
TL;DR: This study investigates the impact of cultural and social proximity on the cross-border effects of terrorist attacks, finding that both factors significantly increase a foreign terrorist incident's impact on American public debates, suggesting a broader conception of proximity is needed.
When policy hits the road: Safe System in Victoria's policy environment.
TL;DR: The Safe System approach has become the dominant means to address road trauma, with bodies such as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, European Union, World Bank, National and State Australian Governments and the United Nations encouraging its uptake as mentioned in this paper .
International Counterterrorism Bureaucracies in the United Nations and the European Union
H. Hegemann
TL;DR: This study examines the organizational basis of international counterterrorism cooperation, focusing on bureaucratic actors in the UN and EU, and how they acquire autonomy and independent functions in combating transnational terrorism post-9/11.
Comparing Discourse and Policy Network Approaches: Evidence from Water Policy on Micropollutants
Simon Schaub,Florence Metz +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare policy networks with discourse networks in respect of the types of actors participating in them, the policy proposals actors advocate and their coalition structures, and find that the discourse network approach particularly emphasizes certain actor types, i.e., expanders who seek to change the policy status quo.
References
•Book
Experimental and Quasi-Experimental Designs for Research
Donald T. Campbell,Julian C. Stanley,Nathaniel Lees Gage +2 more
- 01 Jan 1963
TL;DR: A survey drawn from social science research which deals with correlational, ex post facto, true experimental, and quasi-experimental designs and makes methodological recommendations is presented in this article.
14.4K
•Book
Case Studies and Theory Development in the Social Sciences
Alexander L. George,Andrew Bennett +1 more
- 15 Feb 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, a text that emphasizes the importance of case studies in social science scholarship and shows how to make case study practices more rigorous is presented, with a focus on case studies.
9.6K
Increasing Returns, Path Dependence, and the Study of Politics
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conceptualized path dependence as a social process grounded in a dynamic of increasing returns, and demonstrated that increasing returns processes are likely to be prevalent and that good analytical foundations exist for exploring their causes and consequences.
Related Papers (5)
Alexander L. George,Andrew Bennett +1 more
- 15 Feb 2005
Robert K. Yin
- 01 Oct 1984
John Gerring
- 11 Dec 2006