This book examines the underlying assumptions and implications of how
we conceptualise and investigate poverty. The empirical entry point
for such inquiry is a series of research initiatives that have used
mixed method, combined qualitative and quantitative, or Q-Squared (
Q²) approaches, to poverty analysis. The Q² literature highlights
the vast range of analytical tools within the social sciences that may
be used to understand and explain social phenomena, along with
interesting research results. This literature serves as a lens to
probe issues about knowledge claims made in poverty debates concerning
who are the poor (identification analysis) and why they are poor
(causal analysis). Implicitly or explicitly, questions are raised
about the reasons for emphasising different dimensions of poverty and
favouring different units of knowledge, the basis for distinguishing
valid and invalid claims, the meaning of causation, and the nature of
causal inference, and so forth. Q² provides an entry point to address
foundational issues about assumptions underlying approaches to
poverty, and applied issues about the strengths and limitations of
different research methods and the ways they may be fruitfully
combined. Together, the strands of this inquiry make a case for
methodological pluralism on the grounds that knowledge is partial,
empirical adjudication imperfect, social phenomena complex, and mixed
methods add value for understanding and explanation. Ultimately, the
goals of understanding and explanation are best served if research
questions dictate the choice of methodological approach rather than
the other way around.
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Combining Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches in Poverty Analysis
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191664595
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter