[Book review] Donatella della Porta and Michael Keating (eds), Approaches and Methodologies in the Social Sciences. A Pluralist Perspective, 2008

Similar documents
Joining Forces towards a Sustainable National Research Infrastructure Consortium

Some further estimations for: Voting and economic factors in French elections for the European Parliament

POLITICAL IDENTITIES CONSTRUCTION IN UKRAINIAN AND FRENCH NEWS MEDIA

Traditional leaders and new local government dispensation in South Africa

Abram Bergson. Antoinette Baujard. Antoinette Baujard. Abram Bergson. Working paper GATE <halshs >

Urban income inequality in China revisited,

Accem s observatories network

A necessary small revision to the EVI to make it more balanced and equitable

Corruption and economic growth in Madagascar

The Post-War International Laboratories Projects

An Integer Linear Programming Approach for Coalitional Weighted Manipulation under Scoring Rules

Defining UNESCO s scientific culture:

How to deal with a public inquiry? Views from residents and deep geothermal energy projects stakeholders in Alsace

Natural Desastres and Intelligence in Latinamerica

Part I Introduction. [11:00 7/12/ pierce-ch01.tex] Job No: 5052 Pierce: Research Methods in Politics Page: 1 1 8

ADVANCED POLITICAL ANALYSIS

Global governance versus domestic governance : what roles of international institutions?

Office: SSC 4217 Phone: ext Office Hours: Thursday 11:30am- 1pm

Scope and Methods in Political Science PS 9501a University of Western Ontario Fall 2018

SOSC 5170 Qualitative Research Methodology

Water Parliaments : some examples

Kenyan Government Initiatives in Slum Upgrading

The rise of contra legem and sine lege usages in french commercial law and jurisprudence (XVIIIe-XIXe siècles), some examples

Introduction to Qualitative Methods

Palestinian and Iraqi Refugees and Urban Change in Lebanon and Syria

Measuring solidarity values: not that easy

Research design and qualitative methods By Rainer Bauböck, Donatella della Porta, Fritz Kratochwil, Pascal Vennesson

PS210: Philosophy of Social Science. Fall 2017

Comparative Case Study Research MA Mandatory Elective Course, Fall CEU credits, 4 ECTS

How to improve international and interdisciplinary cooperation in the Social Sciences and the Humanities

Comparative ideas on the French reform of law of obligations

From Tent to Makeshift Housing

Migration and families left behind

Laura Centemeri. To cite this version: HAL Id: hal

Strong normalization of lambda-bar-mu-mu-tilde-calculus with explicit substitutions

Electoral Participation and Local Democracy in French Rural Areas

Popular Unity: Chile,

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY Rockefeller College of Public Affairs and Policy Department of Political Science

Raz s Normative Theory of Authority

Electoral System and Number of Candidates: Candidate Entry under Plurality and Majority Runoff

Modules: HM, SOZ-MA-1, PW09-MA-2, PW-MA-1, IS-MA-1; SOZ-MA-6; PW-BA-SP

The Political Business Cycles in the EU enlarged

Institutional Transfer from the European Union Actors to Ukraine and Moldova: the Case of Hospital Design

Ex Post and Ex Ante Coordination: Principles of Coherence in Organizations and Markets

Open data as political web archives

A theory of joint-stock citizenship. And its consequences on the brain drain, sovereignty and state responsibility

The institutional transfer from the European Union member states to the former Soviet Union countries

Socio-Political Marketing

Power crime. Vincenzo Ruggiero, Michael Welch. To cite this version: HAL Id: hal

CINR 5017 Comparative Approaches to Area Studies and Global Issues

The Philosophy and Methods of Political Science. Keith Dowding

The Study of Decision-Making Speed in the European Union

RESEARCH METHODOLOGY IN POLITICAL SCIENCE STUDY NOTES CHAPTER ONE

Where have the rebels gone? Interview with Eric Hobsbawm

Family Law in Islam - Introduction

Where are the taxis going?

Can a Condorcet Rule Have a Low Coalitional Manipulability?

For a Quantitative Geography of International Organizations: The Human Rights Council case

Entrepreneurship and Rent-Seeking Behavior

An Empirical Analysis of the Europeanization of National Party Manifestos,

Rationality, behavior, institutional and economic change in Schumpeter

GLOBAL CATEGORIZATION OF THE WORLD S INDIGENOUS LAND AND RESOURCES RIGHTS

International Political Theory Series

Governance Theory and Practice

How to guide the economy towards socially desirable directions? Some institutional lessons from the 2007 financial turmoil

MANAGING CONFLICTS IN SLUMS WITHIN A RELOCATION PROJECT. CASE STUDY OF SOWETO EAST, KIBIRA, NAIROBI

THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO Department of Political Science

PRIMARIES : A TOOL FOR PARTY UNIFICATION?

Online Political Debate: Motivating Factors and Impact on Political Engagement

Government Strategies of Political Inquiry, G2010

A Model of its Own? State-NGO Relations in France

Malaria, Colonial Economics and Migrations in Vietnam

The U.S. Congress Syllabus

Demographic Surprises Foreshadow Change in Neoliberal Egypt

Charles Tilly s Understanding of Contentious Politics: A Social Interactive Perspective for Social Science

Multiscalar approaches of voting behaviour of European countries in the United Nations General Assembly

Case studies, process tracing and causal mechanisms in comparative politics Forschungsprojekt Topics and readings

Lobbying by firms to influence public decision : is it a legal or an illegal networking?the cases of France and the United kingdom

The basic approval voting game

Social protests and the world of the environmentalists in the Czech Republic

APPROACHES & THEORIES IN POLITICAL SCIENCE

About the programme MA Comparative Public Governance

media.collegeboard.org/digitalservices/pdf/ap/ap european history course and ex am description.pdf

The french political parties system :From freedom to a public ascendancy

Network Governance: Theories, Methods and Practices

Challenges and Opportunities for the French and European Civil society in a Changing World

Productivity Gains from Agglomeration and Migration in the People s Republic of China between 2002 and 2013

Ronald H. Coase and the Economics of Network Infrastructures

Lynn Ilon Seoul National University

Are Asian Sociologies Possible? Universalism versus Particularism

The Functions of Bureaucratic Routines in a Changing Social State

POLS 110: Introduction to Political Science (WI)

Political Identity in Nairobi s CBD A Visual Exploration of Kenya s capital city

THE FORA OF PUBLIC ACTION IN KENYA: FROM THE ORIGINS OF THE NATIONAL LAND POLICY TO ITS POLITICIZATION

Formal Political Theory II: Applications

THE EDUCATION UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG. Course Outline

COURSE INFORMATION PARTICIPACIÓN SOCIAL Y NUEVOS MOVIMIENTOS SOCIALES. SOCIAL PARTICIPATION AND NEW SOCIAL MOVEMENTS.

Water: Human Right or Commodity? Reflections on the Effectiveness of a Human Right to Water

What Drives Euroskepticism?

POS 6933: Interpretive Approaches to Political Science, Graduate Seminar Fall Course Description and Requirements

Transcription:

[Book review] Donatella della Porta and Michael Keating (eds), Approaches and Methodologies in the Social Sciences. A Pluralist Perspective, 2008 François Briatte To cite this version: François Briatte. [Book review] Donatella della Porta and Michael Keating (eds), Approaches and Methodologies in the Social Sciences. A Pluralist Perspective, 2008. Graduate Journal of Social Science, Amsterdam University Press, 2008, 5 (2), pp.158-161. <http://gjss.org/sites/default/files/issues/chapters/bookreviews/journal-05-02 08-Briatte.pdf>. <halshs-00348853> HAL Id: halshs-00348853 https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00348853 Submitted on 22 Dec 2008 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access archive for the deposit and dissemination of scientific research documents, whether they are published or not. The documents may come from teaching and research institutions in France or abroad, or from public or private research centers. L archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, émanant des établissements d enseignement et de recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires publics ou privés. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution - ShareAlike 4.0 International License

Book Review Donatella della Porta and Michael Keating (eds), Approaches and Methodologies in the Social Sciences. A Pluralist Perspective, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008. ISBN-13: 9780521709668 (pbk). 384 pp. RRP: 19.99. Approaches and Methodologies in the Social Sciences is advertised by its publishers as a revolutionary new textbook and, even though the book aims at describing existing approaches rather than transcending them, it will certainly strike the postgraduate student (its first intended audience) as a remarkably up-to-date, concise and legible discussion of current methodologies and theoretical frameworks of social inquiry. What might qualify as revolutionary, and for which the editors deserve the highest credit, is the book s success in presenting a truly pluralist perspective of possible research techniques, ranging from ethnographic methods (chap. 15 by Zoe Bray) to game theoretic analysis within Bayesian frameworks (chap. 8 by Christine Chwaszcza), along with a detailed discussion of current epistemological considerations in social and political research. Having read a few chapters in close-to-final draft form as their respective authors posted them on personal electronic pages, I was pleased to read the remainder of the book in paperback form, even more so at a relatively inexpensive price by current market standards. Enthusiasm is probably not the first feeling conveyed by the literature on research design and methodology, as a lot of it is plagued by the joint and recurring issues of redundancy and low cumulation. Specifically, the need to achieve a careful balance between theoretical and practical issues in methodological texts makes it a difficult exercise to write concisely and intelligibly on that topic, as every student who has submitted his or her board paper (or research design extended essay) is critically aware of. As Peter Mair notes in his chapter on concept formation (chap. 10), no radical approach to such issues can take credit for producing the best research outputs: while precise and coherent conceptualisations are an essential requirement of academic endeavour, immutable definitions and overly strict standards lack the pragmatism and flexibility which research calls for in practice (p. 196). There is more than one way of resolving the dilemmas of research design (see, for

instance, Martin 2008), and one of the merits of Approaches and Methodologies in the Social Sciences is to prove this thesis right through a detailed examination of existing approaches and methodologies. In addition to their personal accounts, the authors also supplement their contributions with further pointers to the most insightful existing texts, with multiple references to the works of John Gerring, David Collier or Gary Goertz, to name only a few. By that virtue, the book also constitutes an excellent starting point to any inquiry into the methods of social inquiry. As its title suggests, the book is divided into two broad categories that deal respectively with the epistemological approaches (chaps. 1 9) and methodological designs (chaps. 10 16) that support social inquiry. Each section gives different treatments to critically important orientations of research methodology. Case selection, for instance, is examined by both Donatella della Porta and Philippe Schmitter. In the first case (chap. 11), the author contrasts the purposive nature of case selection in small-n research with the statistically-inclined tradition of randomization and strictly-no-interference approach to dependent variables (see King, Keohane and Verba 1994). In the latter case (chap. 14), the author briefly examines how empirical instances from the material world can become cases, through property specification and attention to comparability. Readers of the Oxford Handbooks of Political Science (such as Goodin and Tilly 2006 or Moran, Rein and Goodin 2006) will recognize several chapter headings from the first section: institutional and cultural constraints, ideational perspectives, etc. just as readers acquainted with the Palgrave series in Political Analysis (such as Burnham et al. 2008 or Marsh and Stoker 2002) will easily browse through the methods exposed in the second section. The book finishes with a synthetic essay jointly authored by the editors on the balance and respective merits that characterise the different approaches to social science research. Their reflection addresses critiques of triangulation and pluralism on the grounds of epistemological incommensurability between existing methodologies. In Chapter 2, they provide a detailed answer to such critiques and adequately dismiss non-purposive forms of methodological eclecticism, where multiple methods betray uncertainty and incomplete research designs. Instead, the authors claim that there is scope for synthesis,

triangulation, multiple perspectives and cross-fertilization, insofar as different methods can be equally valid, depending on the question we are asking (p. 322). One might regret that the authors do not emphasize the richness of nested research strategies (see, for instance, Lieberman 2005), except for a brief mention in Philippe Schmitter s chapter (p. 278). Their main argument, nevertheless, is both clear and persuasive: well-formed questions about the past and present state of affairs of the material world should lead researchers towards precise approaches to their research problem (a process acknowledged in the French research tradition as identifying one s problématique, although that term unfortunately lacks a clear definition). Readers struck by the importance of social science concepts as an essential tool in the intellectual exploration of and travel between research questions, problems and analytical angles will find Peter Mair s discussion of concept formation a particularly interesting and enlightening read in that respect. The pluralistic perspective in support of which Donatella della Porta and Michael Keating present such a compelling case takes its roots in the culturally and methodologically diverse environment of the European University Institute in Florence, where the book was crafted. Against this backdrop, their final essay rightly stresses the weight of national specificities, observing that relatively young disciplines as sociology and political science still reflect the impact of different disciplines that nurtured them (p. 317). A challenge for the postgraduate student may then be to take stock of such national proclivities and depart from them as soon as they begin to prove counter-productive in terms of diminishing attempts towards originality and innovation within research designs. Overall, and with respect to the large scope of issues covered by the book, Approaches and Methodologies in the Social Sciences stands out as an excellent, comprehensive contribution to the existing (and vast) literature on research methodology. The book seems a very apt candidate for the bookshelves of virtually any social scientist. References Burnham, Peter, Gilland, Karin, Grant, Wyn and Zig Layton-Henry. 2008. Research Methods in Politics. 2nd edition. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

Goodin, Robert E. and Charles Tilly (eds). 2006. The Oxford Handbook of Contextual Political Analysis. Oxford: Oxford University Press. King, Gary, Keohane, Robert and Sydney Verba. 1994. Designing Social Inquiry. Scientific Inference in Qualitative Research. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Lieberman, Evan S. 2005. Nested Analysis as a Mixed-Method Strategy for Comparative Research. American Political Science Review 99(3): 435 52. Marsh, David and Gerry Stoker. 2002. Theory and Methods in Political Science. 2nd edition. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. Martin, Andy J. 2008. Self-reflection on emergent research design. Graduate Journal of Social Science 5(1): 49 70. Moran, Michael, Rein, Martin and Robert E. Goodin (eds). 2006. The Oxford Handbook of Public Policy. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Reviewer François Briatte Institute of Political Studies University of Grenoble f.briatte@ed.ac.uk