Political science and the rules of causal inference

Political science and the rules of causal inference



Rubric: Chair

For citation:

Biberman Ye. Political science and the rules of causal inference. – Polis. Political Studies. 2009. No. 6. P. 168-175. (In Russ.)



Abstract

This article examines the arguments of two of the most influential books addressing research design strategies for making causal inferences in social science: G.King, R.Keohane and S. Verba’s Designing Social Inquiry (1994) and H.Brady and D.Collier’s Rethinking Social Inquiry (2004).The author offers her own set of basic rules that should guide all social science inquiry, the aim of which is causal inference. These rules apply not only to scholarship that falls in either the quantitative or qualitative category, but also to that which makes use of both sets of tools. The author also suggests a set of organizing principles for social papers concerned with causal inference.


Content No. 6, 2009

See also:


Malinova O.Yu.,
Ideas as independent variables in political studies: in search of adequate methodology. – Polis. Political Studies. 2010. No3

Sergeev V.M.,
Political science of recognition. – Polis. Political Studies. 2013. No6

Savinov L.V.,
Russian political science and its scientometrical characteristics. – Polis. Political Studies. 2012. No3

Khlopin A.D.,
Deformalization of Rules: Cause or Consequence of Institutional Traps?. – Polis. Political Studies. 2004. No6

Chugrov S.V.,
Is There a Non-Western Political Science? (Political Theory by Takashi Inoguchi). – Polis. Political Studies. 2016. No4


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