THEORY AND RESEARCH
out-groups, forms of social contact, and beliefs or
attitudes.
Inductive.To theorize in an inductive direction,
we begin with observing the empirical world and
then reflecting on what is taking place and thinking
in increasingly more abstract ways. We move
toward theoretical concepts and propositions. We
can begin with a general topic and a few vague ideas
that we later refine and elaborate into more precise
concepts when operating inductively. We build
from empirical observations toward more abstract
thinking. In his study of street vendors in New York
City, Duneier (1999) used inductive theorizing. He
developed a theoretical understanding only during
and after he had collected empirical data. He stated,
“I began to get ideas from the things I was seeing
and hearing on the street” (p. 341). Duneier (p. 342)
described the process as being like the method used
by a medical professional who sees patients with
many diverse symptoms. Only after analyzing the
symptoms does the professional make a diagnosis
or coherent story that explains the underlying rea-
son for the many symptoms visible on the surface.
Many researchers use a specific type of induc-
tive theorizing called grounded theory. It involves
formulating new theoretical ideas from the ground
up instead of testing existing theoretical ideas.
Deductive Approach
Theoretical
Framework
Formal Theory
Substantive
Theory
Hypothesis
Testing
Empirical Social Reality
Middle-Range
Theory
Hypothesis,
Empirical Generalization
Inductive Approach
Theoretical
Framework
Formal Theory
Substantive
Theory
Grounded
Theorizing
Empirical Social Reality
Middle-Range
Theory
Concept Formation,
Empirical Generalization
FIGURE 1 Deductive and Inductive Theorizing
Inductive direction An approach to developing or
confirming a theory that begins with concrete empiri-
cal evidence and works toward more abstract concepts
and theoretical relationships.
Grounded theory A type of inductive social theory
often used in qualitative research that builds toward
abstract theory, often by making comparisons of
empirical observations.
Grounded theory is a widely used approach
in qualitative research. It is not the only approach
and it is not used by all qualitative researchers.