Causal mechanisms are an explanatory rather than predictive tool used to unpack the “black boxes” defined by empirical generalizations common in policy research. Specifically, mechanisms can be frequently occurring and easily recognizable causal patterns that are triggered under generally unknown conditions and usually with indeterminate consequences. This approach is appropriate for public administration, public policy, and governance research because it is often based on small N between-case and within-case studies. In testing hypotheses associated with causal mechanism, process-tracing methods are often used
Policy design efforts are hampered by inadequate understanding of how policy tools and actions promo...
This article makes the case for process patterns as an alternative to causal mechanisms. Causal mech...
Our intuitive understandings of causality include a generative process in which a cause yields an ef...
For nearly 20 years, the four edited volumes of Theories of the Policy Process (TPP) have reviewed a...
Causal process tracing (CPT) has emerged as an important method of causal inference in qualitative ...
Over 30 years, several key frameworks and theories of the policy process have emerged which have gui...
This dissertation studies how the mechanism-based view of causality can assist in construction and u...
The identification of cause-and-effect relationships plays an indispensable role in policy research,...
The identification of cause-and-effect relationships plays an indispensable role in policy research,...
Most scholars now agree that process tracing, as a distinct social science method, involves tracing ...
Identifying causal mechanisms is a fundamental goal of social science. Researchers seek to study not...
When Alexander George and I wrote our 2005 book, Case Studies and Theory Development in the Social S...
Almost a century ago, Bertrand Russell called the idea of causality “a relic of a bygone era, surviv...
Mechanism is undoubtedly a causal concept, in the sense that ordinary definitions and philosophical ...
This open access edited volume introduces the concept of causal mechanisms to explore new ways of ex...
Policy design efforts are hampered by inadequate understanding of how policy tools and actions promo...
This article makes the case for process patterns as an alternative to causal mechanisms. Causal mech...
Our intuitive understandings of causality include a generative process in which a cause yields an ef...
For nearly 20 years, the four edited volumes of Theories of the Policy Process (TPP) have reviewed a...
Causal process tracing (CPT) has emerged as an important method of causal inference in qualitative ...
Over 30 years, several key frameworks and theories of the policy process have emerged which have gui...
This dissertation studies how the mechanism-based view of causality can assist in construction and u...
The identification of cause-and-effect relationships plays an indispensable role in policy research,...
The identification of cause-and-effect relationships plays an indispensable role in policy research,...
Most scholars now agree that process tracing, as a distinct social science method, involves tracing ...
Identifying causal mechanisms is a fundamental goal of social science. Researchers seek to study not...
When Alexander George and I wrote our 2005 book, Case Studies and Theory Development in the Social S...
Almost a century ago, Bertrand Russell called the idea of causality “a relic of a bygone era, surviv...
Mechanism is undoubtedly a causal concept, in the sense that ordinary definitions and philosophical ...
This open access edited volume introduces the concept of causal mechanisms to explore new ways of ex...
Policy design efforts are hampered by inadequate understanding of how policy tools and actions promo...
This article makes the case for process patterns as an alternative to causal mechanisms. Causal mech...
Our intuitive understandings of causality include a generative process in which a cause yields an ef...