For its Ninth Congress in Toulouse (5–7 September 2007), the French Political Science Association (AFSP) invited the American Political Science Association (APSA) to hold a joint “tableronde” comparing methods on both sides of the Atlantic. It took the form of three consecutive panels, devoted to qualitative and qualitative approaches, to the dimension of time, and to contextual and inference problems. During three days, 18 papers were presented, over 60 participants attended, and contrasting ways to validate theories and models were discussed at length, illustrated by concrete research examples. The objective here is less to sum up all that was said than to outline the main differences and convergences of our methodologies
The articles in this symposium explore two fundamental questions in the study of politics: (1) why d...
Researchers have long argued that quantitative and qualitative methods are distinct and, therefore, ...
Abstract The quantitative and qualitative research traditions can be thought of as distinct cultures...
For its Ninth Congress in Toulouse (5-7 September 2007), the French Political Science Association (A...
What are the methods that Europeanists use, and how methodologically pluralist is the field? Ideally...
This article surveys two concomitant developments in European political methodology. First, we point...
A map provides a unique view over the complex relationships of competition and complementarity betwe...
One of the primary concerns driving Perestroika was the hegemony of quantitative methods in American...
In the following essay, Benoît Rihoux, Bernhard Kittel and Jonathon W. Moses outline the recent deve...
Political science is the product of modernity and the nation-state. A dominant tradition within it h...
Like many other realms of political science, the debate over political methodology in Europe has bee...
International audienceExtract: […] « This chapter primarily focuses on political science, where in a...
The history of political methodology is the history of estimation. In the race to develop ever more ...
In recent years there has been a polemic between more 'macro-quantitatively' and more 'macro-qualita...
A map provides a unique view over the complex relationships of competition and complementarity betwe...
The articles in this symposium explore two fundamental questions in the study of politics: (1) why d...
Researchers have long argued that quantitative and qualitative methods are distinct and, therefore, ...
Abstract The quantitative and qualitative research traditions can be thought of as distinct cultures...
For its Ninth Congress in Toulouse (5-7 September 2007), the French Political Science Association (A...
What are the methods that Europeanists use, and how methodologically pluralist is the field? Ideally...
This article surveys two concomitant developments in European political methodology. First, we point...
A map provides a unique view over the complex relationships of competition and complementarity betwe...
One of the primary concerns driving Perestroika was the hegemony of quantitative methods in American...
In the following essay, Benoît Rihoux, Bernhard Kittel and Jonathon W. Moses outline the recent deve...
Political science is the product of modernity and the nation-state. A dominant tradition within it h...
Like many other realms of political science, the debate over political methodology in Europe has bee...
International audienceExtract: […] « This chapter primarily focuses on political science, where in a...
The history of political methodology is the history of estimation. In the race to develop ever more ...
In recent years there has been a polemic between more 'macro-quantitatively' and more 'macro-qualita...
A map provides a unique view over the complex relationships of competition and complementarity betwe...
The articles in this symposium explore two fundamental questions in the study of politics: (1) why d...
Researchers have long argued that quantitative and qualitative methods are distinct and, therefore, ...
Abstract The quantitative and qualitative research traditions can be thought of as distinct cultures...