Abstract
Within the social sciences, a robust epistemological debate exists over how the study of social phenomena should be conducted in order to build empirical understanding and theoretical knowledge, and to inform policy making. In political science the result has been a tendency toward quantitative analysis, including large-n studies and formal models, given their purported relative strength in external validity. Qualitative researchers have been counseled to approximate the “scientific” approach, defined as following the conventions of quantitative models as closely as possible. Yet, many contextual and process-oriented research questions within political science are not conducive to quantitative analysis. In this introductory chapter, Kachuyevski and Samuel present the conceptual framework of the book, outlining both the validity and the utility of in-depth qualitative analysis, particularly in policy-relevant research.
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Notes
- 1.
Given the scope of this work, while we make this acknowledgment we do not engage with this debate.
- 2.
We use the term “politics of knowledge ” to refer not simply to the so-called quantitative/qualitative divide, but also to the politics associated with the use by researchers of one approach versus the other, and the corresponding effect this may have on their advancing in academe. As Yanow and Schwartz-Shea (2006) quite rightly note, for junior faculty who conduct qualitative research, there are problems of publication and tenure and promotion; for all faculty, problems may arise in the form of contentions with departmental colleagues who do not value qualitative research and who are resistant to hiring new faculty with qualitative orientations. However, given the parameters of this project, we will not engage with this latter aspect of the politics of knowledge.
- 3.
Indeed, feminists using this approach have been inspired to do so when they seek to get away from existing theoretical accounts of the matter at hand. In so doing, they work within a broad, non-specific theoretical framework that may include influences from postpositivist, critical, and/or queer theories, among others (Ackerly and True 2010).
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Kachuyevski, A., Samuel, L.M. (2018). Introduction: Doing Qualitative Research in Politics: Building Theory and Formulating Policy. In: Kachuyevski, A., Samuel, L. (eds) Doing Qualitative Research in Politics. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-72230-6_1
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