Social Research Methods: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches

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ANALYSIS OF QUALITATIVE DATA

method of agreement. The method of difference is
usually stronger and is a “double application” of the
method of agreement. First, locate cases that are
similar in many respects but differ in a few crucial
ways. Next pinpoint features in which a set of cases
is similar with regard to an outcome and causal fea-
tures and another set in which the cases differ on
outcomes and causal features. The method of dif-
ference reinforces information from positive cases
(e.g., cases that have common causal features and
outcomes) by contrasting it with the negative cases
(e.g., cases lacking the outcome and causal fea-
tures). Thus, you look for cases that have many of
the causal features of positive cases but lack a few
key features and have a different outcome (see an
example of analytic comparison in Example Box 3,
Analytic Comparison to Study the Success and Fail-
ure of Homeless Organizations).

Narrative Analysis
Narrative, as well as the related idea of analyzing
a sequence of events, has multiple meanings and
is used in anthropology, archaeology, history, lin-
guistics, literary criticism, political science, psy-
chology, and sociology.^19 We encountered narrative
regarding historical-comparative research in refer-
ring to a form of historical writing. In addition,

narrativerefers to a type of qualitative data, a form
of inquiry and data gathering, a way to discuss and
present data, a set of qualitative data analysis tech-
niques, and a kind of theoretical explanation. As
Griffin (1992a:419) observed, “Narrative is both a
rhetorical form and a generic, logical form of expla-
nation that merges theorized description of an event
with its explanation.”
Narratives as a way to examine the world have
several features: a connected relationship among
parts, a causal sequence of episodes to form a “plot,”
a selection that emphasizes important versus less
important parts, and a specific mix of time and
place. We use narratives for several purposes. They
can address the issue of “who are we” as individual
people, or they can be public narratives that link us
to larger groups, communities, or nations. Some
narratives describe social forces that act on us.
Finally,metanarrativesare overall frameworks with
master ideas. They organize the thinking of entire
populations for generations (e.g., the ideas of
progress, industrialization, or globalization (see
Somers and Gibson, 1994), Despite its many uses,
a narrative shares core elements (see Expansion Box
6, Six Features of a Narrative).^20
Next we briefly consider several types of nar-
rative, and then turn to examine narrative analysis,
a type of qualitative data analysis.

CAUSAL FACTOR OUTCOME

CASE State Breakdown Peasant Revolt Revolution?


France Ye s Ye s Ye s
Russia 1917 Ye s Ye s Ye s
China Ye s Ye s Ye s
England Ye s No No
Russia 1905 No Ye s No
Germany No No No
Prussia No No No
Japan No No No


EXAMPLE BOX 2

Example of Method of Agreement and Difference:
Theda Skocpol’s Theory of Revolution

Source:Adapted from Mahoney 1999, Table 1.

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