Social Research Methods: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches

(Brent) #1
BIBLIOGRAPHY

Churchill, Gilbert A., Jr. (1983).
Marketing research: Methodological
foundations,3rd ed. New York:
Dryden.
Cicourel, Aaron. (1964). Method and
measurement in sociology.Glencoe,
IL: Free Press.
Cicourel, Aaron. (1973). Cognitive soci-
ology.London: Macmillan.
Cicourel, Aaron. (1982). Interviews, sur-
veys, and the problem of ecological
validity. American Sociologist,
17:11–20.
Clammer, John. (1984). Approaches to
ethnographic research. In Ethno-
graphic research: A guide to general
conduct,edited by R. F. Ellen,
pp. 63–85. Orlando: Academic Press.
Clark, Herbert H., and Michael F.
Schober. (1992). Asking questions
and influencing answers. In
Questions about questions: Inquiries
into the cognitive bases of surveys,
edited by J. Turner, pp. 15–48. New
York: Russell Sage Foundation.
Clarke, Michael. (1975). Survival in the
field: Implications of personal expe-
rience in field work. Theory and So-
ciety,2:95–123.
Clemens, Elisabeth S., and Martin D.
Hughes. (2002). Recovering past
protest: Historical research on social
movements. In Methods of social
movement research,edited by Bert
Klandermans and Suzanne Staggen-
borg, pp. 201–230. Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press.
Clemens, Elizabeth S., and Walter Pow-
ell. (1995). Careers in print: Books,
journals, and scholarly reputations.
American Journal of Sociology,
101:433–497.
Clogg, Clifford C., and D. O. Sawyer.
(1981). A comparison of alternative
models for analyzing the scalability
of response patterns. In Sociological
methodology 1981,edited by S. Lein-
hardt, pp. 240–280. San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass.
Clubb, Jerome M., E. Austin, C. Geda,
and M. Traugott. (1985). Sharing
research data in the social sciences.
In Sharing research data,edited by
S. Fineberg, M. Martin, and M. Straf,
pp. 39–88. Washington, DC: Na-
tional Academy Press.
Cogan, Johan, Judith Torney-Purta, and
Douglas Anderson. (1988). Knowl-
edge and attitudes toward global
issues: Students in Japan and the
United States. Comparative Educa-
tion Review,32:283–297.


Cohen, Patricia Cline. (1982). A calcu-
lating people: The spread of numer-
acy in early America. Chicago:
University of Chicago Press.
Cohen, Stephen R. (1991). The Pittsburg
survey and the social survey move-
ment: A sociological road not taken.
In The social survey in historical
perspective, 1880–1940,edited by
M. Blumer, K. Bales, and K. Sklar,
pp. 245–268. New York: Cambridge
University Press.
Cole, Jonathan R., and Stephen Cole.
(1973). Social stratification in sci-
ence.Chicago: University of Chicago
Press.
Cole, Stephen. (1978). Scientific reward
systems: A comparative analysis.
Research in the Sociology of Knowl-
edge, Science and Art,1:167–190.
Cole, Stephen. (1983). The hierarchy of
the sciences? American Journal of
Sociology,89:111–139.
Cole, Stephen. (1994). Why sociology
doesn’t make progress like the natu-
ral sciences. Sociological Forum,
9:133–154.
Cole, Stephen, Jonathan Cole, and Gary
A. Simon. (1981). Chance and con-
sensus in peer review. Science,
214:881–885.
Coleman, James, and Thomas Hoffer.
(1987). Public and private schools:
The impact of community.New York:
Basic Books.
Collier, Andrew. (2005). Philosophical
and critical realism. In The politics of
method in the human sciences: Posi-
tivism and its epistemological others,
edited by George Steinmetz, pp.
327–365. Durham, NC: Duke Uni-
versity Press.
Collins, H. M. (1983). The sociology of
scientific knowledge: Studies of con-
temporary science. American Review
of Sociology,9:265–285.
Collins, Randall. (1984). Statistics ver-
sus words. Sociological Theory,
2:329–362.
Collins, Randall. (1986). Is 1980s soci-
ology in the doldrums? American
Journal of Sociology,91:1336–1355.
Collins, Randall. (1988). Theoretical so-
ciology.New York: Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich.
Collins, Randall. (1989). Sociology: Pro-
science or anti-science? American
Sociological Review,54:124–139.
Collins, Randall. (1994). Why the so-
cial sciences won’t become high-
consensus, rapid-discovery science.
Sociological Forum,9:155–177.

Collins, Randall, and Sal Restivo. (1983).
Development, diversity and conflict in
the sociology of science. Sociological
Quarterly,24:185–200.
Comaroff, John, and Jean Comaroff.
(1992). Ethnography and the his-
torical imagination.Boulder, CO:
Westview.
Committees on the Status of Women
in Sociology. (1986). The treat-
ment of gender in research.Wash-
ington, DC: American Sociological
Association.
Connell, R. W. (1990). Notes on Ameri-
can sociology and American power.
In Sociology in America,edited by
H. Gans, pp. 265–271. Thousand
Oaks, CA: Sage.
Conrad, Frederick G., and Johnny Blair.
(2009). Sources of error in cognitive
interviews. Public Opinion Quar-
terly,73(1):32–55.
Conrad, Frederick G., and Michael
Schober. (2000). Clarifying question
meaning in a household telephone
survey. Public Opinion Quarterly,
64:1–28.
Contrad, Peter, and Shulamit Reinharz.
(1984). Computers and qualitative
data: Editors’ introductory essay.
Qualitative Sociology,7:3–15.
Converse, Jean M. (1984). Strong argu-
ments and weak evidence: The open/
closed questioning controversy of the
1940s. Public Opinion Quarterly,
48:267–282.
Converse, Jean M. (1987). Survey re-
search in the United States:
Roots and emergence, 1890–1960.
Berkeley: University of California
Press.
Converse, Jean M., and Stanley Presser.
(1986). Survey questions: Hand-
crafting the standardized question-
naire.Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.
Cook, Judith A., and Mary Margaret
Fonow. (1990). Knowledge and
women’s interests: Issues of episte-
mology and methodology in feminist
sociological research. In Feminist re-
search methods,edited by J. McCarl
Nielsen, pp. 69–93. Boulder, CO:
Westview.
Cook, Thomas D., and Donald T. Camp-
bell. (1979). Quasi-experimentation:
Design and analysis issues for field
settings.Chicago: Rand McNally.
Cooper, Christopher A., and H. Gibbs
Knotts. (2006). Region, race, and
support for the South Carolina con-
federate flag. Social Science Quar-
terly,87(1):142–154.
Free download pdf