Summary
Contents
Subject index
‘This book provides a fresh and stimulating approach to causal analysis in the social sciences. International experts provide not just the philosophical arguments for a case-based approach to research but also detailed chapters on: ‘why-to’, ‘when-to’ and ‘how-to’. Traditional distinctions between qualitative and quantitative are rejected in favour of a case-based approach which is applicable across the social sciences and beyond’ - Professor Angela Dale, The University of Manchester
The Proper Relationship of Comparative-Historical Analysis to Statistical Analysis: Subordination, Integration, or Separation?
The Proper Relationship of Comparative-Historical Analysis to Statistical Analysis: Subordination, Integration, or Separation?
‘Comparative-historical analysis has claimed its proud place as one of the most fruitful approaches in modern social science,’ declares Theda Skocpol (2003, p. 424). It is hard to disagree. In the 1960s and 1970s, comparative-historical ...
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