1 / 16

Department of Politics

Department of Politics Research Design and Political Analysis 4. Connecting Levels of Analysis Dr Susan Banducci Associate Professor in Political Science 6 February 2010 Reading: Recommended Texts

Télécharger la présentation

Department of Politics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Department of Politics Research Design and Political Analysis 4. Connecting Levels of Analysis Dr Susan BanducciAssociate Professor in Political Science 6 February 2010

  2. Reading: • Recommended Texts • Mahoney and Goertz (2004). "The Possibility Principle: Choosing Negative Cases in Comparative Research." • Process Tracing and Historical Explanation (Chapter 10). In: George and Bennett (2005). "Case Studies And Theory Development In The Social Sciences." • Complementary Texts • Fearon (1991). "Counterfactuals and Hypothesis Testing in Political Science." • Bennett and Elman (2006). "Qualitative Research: Recent Developments in Case Study Methods."

  3. Plan for today’s seminar: • Introduction to Topic • Exercise • Some more notes • Questions from reading

  4. Levels of Analysis I • Graham Allison • levels of analysis - system level, state level, and sub-state level • beliefs, perception and misperception • rationality • small-group decision-making • Culture and identity • Domestic politics • *unit vs level of analysis (or explanation)

  5. Levels of Analysis II • Levels of reality (see Ritzer, for example) • Three different levels • Micro, meso, macro • Or simple analytical categories • Macro (e.g. Population, power, production) • Meso (segmentation, differentiation, integration) • Micro – emotions, symbols • Bridging the gap

  6. Levels of Analysis III • Two level theories (Goertz and Mahoney 2005 Sociological Research Methods) • Basic Level • Y = X * Z (and only) • Y = X + Z (and/or) • Y = U * X + U * Z (hybrid) • Second Level • Y = min(sum(X1,X2, . . .), 1)

  7. An example: • Skocpol’s Theory of Social Revolution • States and Social Revolutions (1979) • Dep. Var - onset of social revolution in France, Russia, and China through a comparison with several other cases that did not experience social revolution.

  8. Units of Analysis (inference) and Levels of Observation • Causal inference about what? • What is being observed? • Cross-level analysis Observation Analysis

  9. Multi-level analysis • Aggregate Data Analysis • Higher level units, data aggregated from • Contextual Analysis

  10. Example: Results

  11. Group Exercise: • Each group prepare 5 minute presentation using one of the examples • Answer following questions: • What are the levels of analysis? • What is the unit of analysis? • What is the level of explanation? • Represent units, levels and “causal” pathways in a diagram • Be prepared to ask questions about other examples.

  12. Ecological Fallacy • Inferring individual-level relationships from relationships observed at an aggregate level. • This is because the correlation between ecologic variables is often markedly different from the corresponding individual correlation within the same population • Robinson, 1950, Ecological Correlations and the behavior of individuals. Am Soc Rev.

  13. Multiple Levels of Analysis • Cross-level inference • Both levels interact • Units (micro, level 1) within bigger units (macro, level 2) • Individuals within countries • Firms within states • Elections within years, within countries

  14. Multiple Levels of Analysis • Cross-level inference • Units (micro, level 1) within bigger units (macro, level 2) • Individuals within countries • Firms within states • Elections within years, within countries

  15. Questions: • Case selection • Selecting for characteristics at both levels

More Related