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Lecture 3 Case studies: Research Methods

Research Methods National Research University, Higher School of Economics Ph.D. Programme Dr C S Leonard June 2011. Lecture 3 Case studies: Research Methods. Outline. What is a case study? Context and N Causal reasoning Case Selection

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Lecture 3 Case studies: Research Methods

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  1. Research MethodsNational Research University, Higher School of EconomicsPh.D. Programme Dr C S Leonard June 2011 Lecture 3 Case studies: Research Methods

  2. Outline • What is a case study? • Context and N • Causal reasoning • Case Selection • Building a theory: getting help from a statistically derived case study GSOM Research Methods 2011

  3. What is a Case Study? What is it? GSOM Research Methods 2011

  4. Context • The examination of a single unit within its real life context. • The aim is to elucidate the features of a broader set of similar cases (Gerring).

  5. Is a Case Study Small N? • Common criticism: ‘how can you generalise from one case?’ • Confusion over language and the meaning of a ‘case’ – a case study is not one observation (Shleifer) • Some case studies use a survey and therefore have multiple observations, e.g. Middletown (cited in Gerring 2007 and Yin 2003) • Some case studies contain nested sub-cases or within case units, e.g. before and after. • Even if the case under study is one individual, there will be multiple observations of different kinds. GSOM Research Methods 2011

  6. Not N, Context • The examination of a single unit within its real life context. • The aim is to elucidate the features of a broader set of similar cases (Gerring). • A unit is a relatively bounded phenomenon – e.g. a nation, a firm, a department, an industry, a strategy, or person. GSOM Research Methods 2011

  7. Context and causal mechanisms • Astudy which investigates a contemporary phenomenon within its real life context (Yin, 2003) • - The strength of case studies is that they can identify causal mechanisms, and tracing causal mechanisms entails sensitivity to local context (Bennett and George, 2005) GSOM Research Methods 2011

  8. Why case studies? • Research can contain two conflicting requirements • Data Integrity • Generalizability(high currency) • Depends on research topic and type of problem GSOM Research Methods 2011

  9. Generalizability • There is much versatility – it depends on the nature of your case and on your research question. • Some case studies use only qualitative data • Some use both qualitative and quantitative data • The use of different kinds of evidence is very common in case study research GSOM Research Methods 2011

  10. The “So What” Question • Both theory and case studies focus on the particular and on detail. • Both theory and case studies must deal with the ‘So What?’ question. • For both theory and case studies in-depth understanding and context provide a way of dealing with the ‘so what’ question. GSOM Research Methods 2011

  11. Embeddedness • Case study thus defined is especially suitable for studying phenomenon that are high complex and/or embedded in their cultural context (Verschuren, 2003) GSOM Research Methods 2011

  12. Rationality • Daniel Little illustrates this in relation to rational choice theory – ‘context bound rationality’ (the authors of Analytic Narratives refer to Daniel Little when advocating their approach to case study research) GSOM Research Methods 2011

  13. Examples of Case Studies • Benedict Anderson: ‘imagined communities’ (earnings repatriation and economic growth) • Chalmers Johnson: the ‘developmental state’ (Ministry of Trade and Industry in Japan) • “Smart” Growth Clusters GSOM Research Methods 2011

  14. Relevance of case studies for Economics • Much of the case literature on how to define a research question, identify suitable data, link data to theory and make appropriate generalisations have relevance for research design more generally. GSOM Research Methods 2011

  15. Case Selection GSOM Research Methods 2011

  16. Case Study of What? • What your case study is a case of will affect your population (or unit selection), your materials, the theoretical propositions that inform your research • Failure to clarify early on what your case study is a study of could leave you with a list of details and facts – an information download. GSOM Research Methods 2011

  17. Helps Decision-Making It helps you to identify and define potential variables of interest. It helps you to formulate theories. It helps you decide to which wider conversation or ‘scholarly mosaic’ you will contribute your piece. GSOM Research Methods 2011

  18. Caveats • The objective must be causal inference (with reference to the larger population) • Larger reference, not within group distinctions • The research must begin with understanding of the inferences being made (not searching for cases) • All have large and small-N implications, or possibilities • Most important: statistical means to identify the cases you wish to study further GSOM Research Methods 2011

  19. Case Selection GSOM Research Methods 2011

  20. Principles of selection • Typicality • Probably somewhat illusory • Most often the basis for choice • Useful in finding causal mechanism in general cross case relationship GSOM Research Methods 2011

  21. Most similar • A case that is like another case in all respects except for either a key independent variable or the dependent variable of interest (2 villages similar for all major socio-economic indicators except one has a female high suicide rate) GSOM Research Methods 2011

  22. Most diverse • Achievement of maximum variance along relevant dimensions, the diverse case method • Minimum of 2 cases to represent the full range of values characterizing X, Y or X/Y relationship • Exploratory, hypothesis seeking when X or Y, and hypothesis confirming, when X/Y GSOM Research Methods 2011

  23. Diverse, cont • Either categorical (one from each group), continuous (from each extreme plus the mean or median), break points, where causal factor is vector of variables that can be measured, leads to cross tabs (sometimes you need to redefine a variable for categorical responses) GSOM Research Methods 2011

  24. The Extreme • Because of its extreme value on X or Y (outlier), in large N, defined in terms of the sample mean and standard deviation • Seems to violate maxim: don’t select on dependent variable, but not. Treat it as not representative. • Its objective is purely exploratory • May morph into something else later GSOM Research Methods 2011

  25. Deviant case • Surprising value, anomalous • Relative to the mean of a single distribution • By reference to cross case relationships and are poorly explained • Relative to general model (ie, it may change the general model) • Probe for new unspecified explanations GSOM Research Methods 2011

  26. Most influential • Need to check assumptions behind the model • Checking cases that have influence to make sure they fit the sample • To explore cases that may be influential in a larger cross case study • Leverage of a case (large n) • Hat matrix, tells of potential influence • Cook’s distance (the extent to which the coefficient would change if a case were omitted) GSOM Research Methods 2011

  27. Most similar and most different • Like diverse case method • Chosen pair similar on all measured independent variables except the one of interest • That is, you expect that the pattern of co-variation depends upon the absence of a variable • Statistical tool: matching techniques (major topic in econometrics) comes from experimental logic: (difference of means test?) using a treatment group and matching cases in the control group GSOM Research Methods 2011

  28. Summary • There is the need to show wider relevance – this entails offering explanations that can be applied at a higher level of abstraction, and so some of the detail of the case study must be lost • In most case study research, there is ongoing interaction between theoretical propositions and revisions to them (deduction), and collection and analysis of empirical data (induction). • Regardless of approach to the case study rigor and clarity are necessary (case study protocols ala Yin help, or the structured approach of Bennett and George part 2 do the same).

  29. Example of Case Selection (adapted from Gerring, 2007) • Most different: Cases that are different in all respects except for x and y variables, so both IBM and GAZPROM have large scale operations and a conservative culture but differ in all other respects GSOM Research Methods 2011

  30. The Statistical Sampling Approach • Places emphasis on replication (interview replication/within case unit replication/case replication) in order to saturate theoretical categories. GSOM Research Methods 2011

  31. Use of theory in case study design and analysis GSOM Research Methods 2011

  32. Theory building from cases • Iterative process • Multiple investigators • Results in greater originality • Hypotheses can be proven false • Theories generated apart from evidence have testability problems • Bottom up approach, however, may have problems of idiosyncracy GSOM Research Methods 2011

  33. To test reliability • Reliability: Inconsistency in data collection affects findings GSOM Research Methods 2011

  34. To test validity • Validity: • Construct validity: are you looking at what you think you are looking at? Congruence between key concepts in the research question and the material that you gather (context is important). • Internal validity: causal mechanisms. • External validity: the scope conditions, the domain to which generalisations can be applied. GSOM Research Methods 2011

  35. Quantitative • Quantitative approach (DSI/Geddes): Theory is used in formulating a hypothesis against which the findings of a representative case study contained many observations is tested GSOM Research Methods 2011

  36. Structured • Structured/Theory Driven Approach (Gerring.Bennett and George): Literature informs a theory which is modified based on limited understanding of an empirical case. Then through the process of data gathering and analysis the theory is modified and revised and informs further data gathering and analysis: ongoing process of deduction and induction GSOM Research Methods 2011

  37. Problem Driven/Analytic Narrative • The aim is to explain the problem of why within a particular case one outcome resulted rather than another • Rational actors making rational choices are assumed • The case focuses on how institutions shape causal linkages, particular pathways and the choices actors make • Theory is developed along with the empirical data GSOM Research Methods 2011

  38. The Extended Case Method (Burawoy): • The theoretically informed researcher extracts what is general from the unique. • Theory helps to explain the macro-processes and structures within which the locally based case is situated. • Wider relevance is claimed not by saying that the explanation of the study applies to many other cases but by explaining: (1) the wider structures in which the particular is embedded (2) by showing how the particular is the incarnation of a more abstract macro-level process. GSOM Research Methods 2011

  39. Interpretive Method: • Tries to privilege inductively derived insider categories and understandings. • The researcher reads a wider theoretically literature but then brackets this out. • The researcher then immerses him/herself in the empirical data and codes inductively to identify indigenous ways of explaining, before returning to the wider literature to position, revise, contextualise etc. (see Tavory and Timmermans, 2009 and their bibliography) GSOM Research Methods 2011

  40. Generalising • Always make delimited and contingent claims. • The goal is rarely to refute theory, but to identify whether and how the scope conditions of competing theories should be expanded or narrowed (Gerring). • Rather than try to claim a causal effect across a number of similar cases it is better to specify the ways in which causal mechanisms converge and interact in your case. • Rather than ‘generalise’ you may want to extrapolate from your case to other cases, and do so at the theoretical level GSOM Research Methods 2011

  41. Interaction • In most case study research, there is ongoing interaction between theoretical propositions and revisions to them (deduction), and collection and analysis of empirical data (induction). GSOM Research Methods 2011

  42. Selection on dependent variable: No Control • Barbara Geddes – Elaborates the concern of many quantitative scholars that case studies are selected on the dependent variable GSOM Research Methods 2011

  43. Building a theory from case study research (Eisenhardt 1989) • Getting started • Can get overwhelmed by information, volume of data • Go in with special aims: collect specific kinds of data systematically • A priori specification of constructs • Important in the case study (ie, conflict, power, competition, transition economy) • Of course no construct is guaranteed a place in the resultant theory and question may shift GSOM Research Methods 2011

  44. Used for building not testing theory • Theory building research, as opposed to theory testing research • Should specify ex ante the research problem and potentially important variables but be open to the theory and their relationship GSOM Research Methods 2011

  45. Ex: strategic change and competitiveness • Choosing cases • For theoretical reasons (from previous research), to fill theoretical categories and provide examples of polar types • Likely to replicate or extend the emerging theory GSOM Research Methods 2011

  46. Combining sources • Qualitative and quantitative • Theory building seems to require rich description • But the quantitative information is the foundation • Multiple investigators usually help • Make visits to case study sites in teams • Want divergent views GSOM Research Methods 2011

  47. Building the theory • Analyzing cases from within • Least codified part of project • Pure descriptions may help being flooded with too much information • Revise construct, search for measure • Note differences between cases • Establish construct validity (important in hypothesis testing and theory building) GSOM Research Methods 2011

  48. Replication • Cases that confirm the theory or construct are supplemented by those that don’t, allowing for theory extension • Example of stable coalitions (one case was not stable, leading to reexamination of data, and it turned out that stability occurred over time, evolving in coalitions) • Qualitative work at this points helps understand why something is happening (internal validity) • You must judge the strength and consistency of a relationship across cases without an F GSOM Research Methods 2011

  49. Go back to the literature • Find confirming and conflicting studies • Overcoming the reasoning in the latter, will help build confidence in your case • Finding differences forces you into frame-braking mode, more creative, deeply insightful • Finding similarities in other literature, also confirms your work and enhances its internal validity (which may rest on too few cases) GSOM Research Methods 2011

  50. Saturation • Stop when you have proved your case • Incremental learning is minimal • Stop iterating when saturated GSOM Research Methods 2011

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