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How to Lure Analytic Social Science Out of the Doldrums

Some Lessons from Comparative Research

Charles C. Ragin

University of Arizona

The practice of quantitative research in the social sciences today is dominated by a specific research template that encourages researchers to focus on the net additive effects of independent variables on variation in a dependent variable, using samples drawn from ‘given’ populations. Comparative research, especially case-oriented investigation, offers a number of important challenges to this template. While these challenges may appear to constitute a rejection of conventional quantitative research, they can be viewed instead as important leads for improving quantitative analysis. The specific challenges addressed in this article center on researchers' conceptions of their populations, their dependent variables, their independent variables (especially the goal of estimating net effects) and the nature of the connections between case aspects.

Key Words: case-oriented research • comparative research • methodology • qualitative research • quantitative research • research practices • set relations

International Sociology, Vol. 21, No. 5, 633-646 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/0268580906067834


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P. J. Aspinall
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International Sociology, January 1, 2007; 22(1): 41 - 70.
[Abstract] [PDF]