Social Research

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Malcolm Williams - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Objectivity and Subjectivity in Social Research
    2012
    Co-Authors: Gayle Letherby, John Scott, Malcolm Williams
    Abstract:

    Objectivity and subjectivity are key concepts in Social Research. This book, written by leading authors in the field, takes a completely new approach to objectivity and subjectivity, no longer treating them as opposed - as many existing texts do - but as logically and methodologically related in Social Research.

  • Making Sense of Social Research
    2002
    Co-Authors: Malcolm Williams
    Abstract:

    Introduction Science and Commitment in Social Research From Question to Method Research as Interpretation Selecting and Sampling Survey Research Questionnaire Design Analysing Survey Data The Ethics of Social Research Designing Research Reporting Findings

  • Social Research the emergence of a discipline
    International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2000
    Co-Authors: Malcolm Williams
    Abstract:

    This paper advances the conjecture that Social Research is becoming a discipline in its own right, independent of substantive disciplines such as sociology, Social policy or political science. In the first part of the paper I briefly examine the historical foundations of Research and the factors that led to its growth in the last two decades. In the second part of the paper I discuss the implications arising from an increased demand for methods training, in particular the potential impact of autonomous degrees and pathways in Social Research on traditional Social science disciplines.

  • Social Research ? the emergence of a discipline?
    International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2000
    Co-Authors: Malcolm Williams
    Abstract:

    This paper advances the conjecture that Social Research is becoming a discipline in its own right, independent of substantive disciplines such as sociology, Social policy or political science. In the first part of the paper I briefly examine the historical foundations of Research and the factors that led to its growth in the last two decades. In the second part of the paper I discuss the implications arising from an increased demand for methods training, in particular the potential impact of autonomous degrees and pathways in Social Research on traditional Social science disciplines.

  • An Introduction To The Philosophy Of Social Research
    1996
    Co-Authors: T May, Malcolm Williams
    Abstract:

    What is science? philosophy, Social science and method knowing the Social world objectivity and values in Social Research philosophical issues in the process of Social Research post-structuralism, postmodernism and Social Research.

Julia Brannen - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Social Research Matters - Beginnings and Biography
    Social Research Matters, 2019
    Co-Authors: Julia Brannen
    Abstract:

    This introductory chapter provides a brief biography of the author, offering a glimpse of the author's beginnings in the field of Social Research. This story is not intended to be a tale of individual endeavour but an examination of the times, concerns, and conditions in which the work of one sociologist develops and how a career reliant on Research that is externally funded is forged. The Research that the author discusses concerns the family and working lives of mothers and fathers, and also the lives of children, both across the life course and over historical time. The book has two main themes that will be interwoven throughout the text. A central theme is how Social Research matters in relation to historical context. A second theme focuses on the practice of Social Research; Research is a craft that is learned with and from others as well as through reading methodological texts and training. Although the expertise of the Researcher is crucial to all phases of the Research process, much of the success of funded Research is dependent on collaboration and the creation of conditions that are conducive to team-based Research.

  • Social Research Matters: A Life in Family Sociology
    2019
    Co-Authors: Julia Brannen
    Abstract:

    From the vantage point of forty years in Social Research and the study of families, the author of this book offers an invaluable account of how Research is conducted and ‘matters’ at particular times. The book has two main themes that are interwoven throughout the text. A central theme is how Social Research matters in relation to historical context. A second theme focuses on the practice of Social Research; Research is a craft that is learned with and from others as well as through reading methodological texts and training. Although the expertise of the Researcher is crucial to all phases of the Research process, much of the success of funded Research is dependent on collaboration and the creation of conditions that are conducive to team-based Research. This fascinating work covers key developments in the field that remain of vital concern to society and demonstrates how Social Research is an art as well as a science — a process that involves craft and creativity.

  • The SAGE Handbook of Social Research Methods - The Sage Handbook of Social Research Methods
    2008
    Co-Authors: Pertti Alasuutari, Leonard Bickman, Julia Brannen
    Abstract:

    Social Research in Changing Social Conditions PART ONE: DIRECTIONS IN Social Research The End of the Paradigm Wars? - Alan Bryman The History of Social Research Methods - Marja Alastalo Assessing Validity in Social Research - Martyn Hammersley Ethnography and Audience - Karen Armstrong Social Research and Social Practice in Post-Positivist Society - Pekka Sulkunen From Questions of Methods to Epistemological Issues - Ann Nilsen The Case of Biographical Research Research Ethics in Social Science - Celia B. Fisher and Andrea E. Anushko PART TWO: Research DESIGNS The Core Analytics of Randomized Experiments for Social Research - H S Bloom Better Quasi-Experimental Practice - Thomas D. Cook and Vivian Wong Sample Size Planning with Applications to Multiple Regression - Ken Kelly and Scott E. Maxwell Power and Accuracy for Omnibus and Targeted Effects Re-Conceptualizing Generalization in Qualitative Research - Giampietro Gobo Old Issues in a New Frame Case Study in Social Research - Linda Mabry Longitudinal and Panel Studies - Janet Holland, Rachel Thomson and Jane Elliott Comparative and Cross-National Designs - David de Vaus PART THREE: DATA COLLECTION AND FIELDWORK Modern Measurement in the Social Sciences - James A. Bovaird and Susan E. Embretson Natural and Contrived Data - Susan Speer Self Administered Questionnaires and Standardized Interviews - Edith de Leeuw Qualitative Interviewing and Feminist Research - Andrea Doucet and Natasha Mautner Biographical Methods - Joanna Bornat Focus Groups - Janet Smithson PART FOUR: TYPES OF ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION OF EVIDENCE An Introduction to the Multi Level Model for Change - Suzanne E. Graham, Judith D. Singer and John B. Willett Latent Variable Models of Social Research Data - Rick H. Hoyle Equating Groups - Stephen West and Felix Thoemmes Discourse Analysis and Conversation Analysis - Charles Antaki Analyzing Narratives and Story-Telling - Matti Hyvarinen Reconstructing Grounded Theory - Kathy Charmaz Documents and Action - Lindsay Prior Video and the Analysis of Work and Interaction - Christian Heath and Paul Luff Secondary Analysis of Qualitative Data - Janet Heaton Secondary Analysis of Quantitative Data Sources - Angela Dale, Jo Wathan and Vanessa Wiggins Conducting a Meta Analysis - Erika A. Patall and Harris Cooper Synergy and Synthesis - Jane Fielding and Nigel Fielding Integrating Qualitative and Quantitative Data The Analytic Integration of Qualitative Data Sources - Ann Cronin, Victoria D. Alexander, Jane Fielding, Jo Moran-Ellis and Hilary Thomas Combining Different Types for Quantitative Analysis - Max Bergman Writing and Presenting Social Research - Amir Marvasti

Stephen Frosh - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Social Research after the Cultural Turn - Social Research after the cultural turn
    2012
    Co-Authors: Sasha Roseneil, Stephen Frosh
    Abstract:

    Social Research after the Cultural Turn explores the contested meanings and diverse practices of Social Research in the context of contemporary theoretical debates in cultural and Social theory. It addresses fundamental questions facing those working in the Social and human sciences today. What are the possibilities, and challenges, for Social Research after the 'cultural turn'? How have the epistemological and political contexts of Social Research changed? Can we still define a distinct sphere of 'the Social' to Research? What distinguishes Social Research from cultural studies and the humanities? What methodologies might critical Social Research employ, and in what registers should it operate? Social Research after the Cultural Turn brings together leading scholars from a range of disciplines and interdisciplinary fields - including gender and feminist studies, psychoSocial studies and psychoanalysis, religious studies, history, development studies, law, critical race and post-colonial studies, and sociology.

  • Social Research after the Cultural Turn: A (Self-)Critical Introduction
    Social Research after the Cultural Turn, 2012
    Co-Authors: Sasha Roseneil, Stephen Frosh
    Abstract:

    What are the possibilities for Social Research after the ‘cultural turn’? How have the epistemological and political contexts of Social Research changed? Can we still define a distinct sphere of ‘the Social’ to Research? What ontologies and methodologies might critical Social Research employ after the cultural turn?

Angela Dale - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Editorial: Quality in Social Research
    International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2006
    Co-Authors: Angela Dale
    Abstract:

    The theme of this issue of IJSRM is quality in Social Research and the papers cover a broad spectrum of methods and positions. All the papers have been contributed by members of the Economic and So...

Sasha Roseneil - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Social Research after the Cultural Turn - Social Research after the cultural turn
    2012
    Co-Authors: Sasha Roseneil, Stephen Frosh
    Abstract:

    Social Research after the Cultural Turn explores the contested meanings and diverse practices of Social Research in the context of contemporary theoretical debates in cultural and Social theory. It addresses fundamental questions facing those working in the Social and human sciences today. What are the possibilities, and challenges, for Social Research after the 'cultural turn'? How have the epistemological and political contexts of Social Research changed? Can we still define a distinct sphere of 'the Social' to Research? What distinguishes Social Research from cultural studies and the humanities? What methodologies might critical Social Research employ, and in what registers should it operate? Social Research after the Cultural Turn brings together leading scholars from a range of disciplines and interdisciplinary fields - including gender and feminist studies, psychoSocial studies and psychoanalysis, religious studies, history, development studies, law, critical race and post-colonial studies, and sociology.

  • Social Research after the Cultural Turn: A (Self-)Critical Introduction
    Social Research after the Cultural Turn, 2012
    Co-Authors: Sasha Roseneil, Stephen Frosh
    Abstract:

    What are the possibilities for Social Research after the ‘cultural turn’? How have the epistemological and political contexts of Social Research changed? Can we still define a distinct sphere of ‘the Social’ to Research? What ontologies and methodologies might critical Social Research employ after the cultural turn?