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Joe Bond Class 6 July 10, 2013

Harvard Summer School, 2013 Graduate Research Methods and Scholarly Writing in the Social Sciences: Government and History Harvard Summer School: SSCI S-100b Section 2 (32761). Joe Bond Class 6 July 10, 2013. Agenda. Midterm Review Facilitation: PJ, Yihong , & Federica

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Joe Bond Class 6 July 10, 2013

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  1. Harvard Summer School, 2013Graduate Research Methods and Scholarly Writing in the Social Sciences: Government and HistoryHarvard Summer School: SSCI S-100b Section 2 (32761) Joe BondClass 6July 10, 2013

  2. Agenda • Midterm Review • Facilitation: PJ, Yihong, & Federica • Review and Case Studies • In-Class 6

  3. Midterm Review

  4. Tonight’s Readings • Yihong, PJ, Federica

  5. Questions • Why are people uncomfortable applying the nomothetic model (as opposed to idiographic model) to human behavior and attitudes? • Why are causes that are both necessary and sufficient difficult to identify in the social sciences? • Why is it ill advised to view the process of measuring variables and as distinct from the process of dtermining associations among variables?

  6. More Questions • GPA is often taken as an indicator of her or his intelligence relative to that of other students. Give some reasons why GPA may NOT be (a Reliable and b) valid as a measure of intelligence. • Why is it important to consider the levels of measurement of variables in doing research?

  7. Group Exercise • Design a field research project to investigate the differences in friendship patterns in coed and single-sex residence halls. For each situation describe some of the possible indicators that might be relevant to the concept. • How would you determine the strength of friendships? • How would you determine the quality of friendships? • Which other aspects of friendship patterns would you expect to differ in the two situations? List three along with possible indicators.

  8. What is a Case Study? • A definitional morass • Qualitative method, small-N (Yin, 1994) • Ethnographic, clinical, participant-observation, or otherwise “in the field” (Yin, 1994) • Characterized by process-tracing (George & Bennett, 2004) • Investigates the properties of a single case (Campbell & Stanley, 1963) • Investigates a single phenomenon, instance or example (the most common usage)

  9. Definition • A case study is an intensive study of a single unit for the purpose of understanding a larger class of (similar) units (Gerring, 2004) • A unit connotes a spatially bounded phenomenon (e.g. a nation-state, revolution, political party, election, or person – observed at a single point in time or over some delimited period of time.

  10. Nested Definitions • A population is comprised of a sample (studied cases), as well as unstudiedcases • A sample is comprised of several units, and each unit is observed at discrete points in time, comprising cases • A case is comprised of several relevant dimensions (variables), each of which is built upon an observation or observations

  11. Case Study as a Dataset • Observations as cells • Variables as columns • Cases as rows • Units as either groups of cases or individual cases

  12. Important! • All terms are definable only by reference to a particular proposition and a corresponding research design • A country may function as a case, a unit, a population or a case study • It all depends • In a typical cross-country time series regression analysis, units are countries, cases are country-years, and observations are collected for each case on a range of variables

  13. Three Types of Case Studies • Type I Case Studies: look at variation in a single unit over time, thus preserving the primary unit of analysis • Spatial Variation: None (1 unit) • Temporal Variation: Yes • American Revolution (before, during, after)

  14. Three Types of Case Studies, Continued • Type II Case Studies: break down the primary unit of analysis into subunits, which are the subjected to variation analysis synchronically (i.e. one point in time) • Spatial Variation: Within-unit • Temporal Variation: No • American Revolution (perspectives of the N. & S.)

  15. Three Types of Case Studies, Continued • Type III Case Studies: break down the primary unit of analysis into subunits, which are the subjected to variation analysis synchronically & diachronically (i.e. over time) • Spatial Variation: Within-unit • Temporal Variation: Yes • American Revolution (perspectives of the S & N before, during and after)

  16. Three Types of Case Studies, Continued • Type I, Type II, and Type III case studies are the three logically conceivable approaches to the study of a single unit where that unit is viewed as an instance of some broader phenomenon • Consequently, where one refers to the case study method, one is referring to three possible methods, each with a different menu of variational evidence

  17. The N Question • N = number of cases • The number of cases employed by a case study may be small or large • Consequently, may be evaluated in a qualitative or quantitative fashion

  18. Example: The French Revolution • N = 1 case (France) • Broaden the analysis to include a second revolution (e.g. American Revolution), N = 2 cases • Represents a gross distortion of what is really going on! • More correct to describe such a study as comprising two units, rather than two casesbecause a case study of a single event generally examines that event over time

  19. Example: The French Revolution • France is observed before, during, and after the event to see what changed and what remained the same after the revolution • Creates multiple cases (N) out of a single unit (French Revolution) • N = 2, at the very least (e.g. before & after a revolution), in a case study of Type I • Spatial Variation: None (1 unit) • Temporal Variation: Yes

  20. French Revolution as a Single Point in Time • No temporal variation – studied at a single point in time – the object of investigation – are there patterns of variation within that unit or a case study of Type II • Within-unit cases consists of all cases that lie at a lower level of analysis relative to the inference under investigation

  21. Important! • If the primary unit of analysis is the nation-state (e.g. France), then within-unit cases might be constructed from provinces, localities, groups or individuals • Unit-of-analysis = French Revolution • Cases = sub-national entities, groups or individuals • The possibilities for within-unit analysis are, in principle, infinite

  22. Relevance • Counterintuitive: Many Type II case studies have a larger N than cross-sectional time series analysis • Why? • Assume that your time series’ unit-of-analysis is comprised of country-revolution-years (how many are there?) • Assume that your Type II case study unit-of-analysis is the French Revolution and your cases represent individuals (a hundred or so)

  23. Type III Case Studies • Type II case studies involve spatial variation (within-unit) but no temporal variation • Type III cases studies involve both spatial and temporal variation, thus the potential N increases accordingly • Type III cases studies are probably the most common genre of case study analysis

  24. Summary • Case studies usually perform a double function; they are studies of the unit itself and they are studies of a broader class of units

  25. Strengths of Case Studies • Case studies are more useful when inferences are descriptive rather than causal • When propositional depth is prized over breadth and boundedness • When (internal) case comparability is give precedence over (external) case representativeness • When the strategy of research is exploratory, rather than confirmatory • When the useful variance is available for only a single unit or smaller number of units

  26. Group Exercise • Break into 3 groups • Come up with examples for each of the three case study types (i.e. I, II, and III) • For each Type, draw an illustration on the board representing temporal and spatial variation

  27. In-Class Writing Exercise 6

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