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Social Research Methods

Social Research Methods. Documents. 1. Classic works. Classic works in sociology based on documents (e.g. Marx, Weber, Durkheim). 2. References. Prior, Lindsay. 2003. Using Documents in Social Research . London: Sage Publications Ltd.

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Social Research Methods

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  1. Social Research Methods Documents 1

  2. Classic works • Classic works in sociology based on documents (e.g. Marx, Weber, Durkheim) 2

  3. References • Prior, Lindsay. 2003. Using Documents in Social Research. London: Sage Publications Ltd. • Rapley, Tim. 2008. Doing Conversation, Discourse and Document Analysis. Los Angeles ; London: SAGE Publications. • Scott, John C. 1990. A Matter of Record: Documentary Sources in Social Research. Cambridge: Polity Press. • Mcculloch, Gary. 2004. Documentary Research: In Education, History and the Social Sciences. New edition. London: Routledge. • Hodson, Randy Dale (Ed.) (1999) Analyzing Documentary Accounts, London: Sage Publications Ltd.

  4. Proximate and Mediate access to data • SCOTT distinguishes: • Proximate • Research has direct access to data provider, can influence process of data collection or data generation. • Mediate • no direct access, relies on data providers having left “traces” for other reasons. Researcher cannot influence data collection process • Cf. obtrusive vs. unobtrusive measures

  5. Material vs. Texts • Scott also distinguishes • Material traces (e.g. archaeology) vs. texts left. • Latter is main focus of documentary research • (But N.B. film and video)

  6. Manuscripts Letters and diaries Autobiographies Acts of Parliament Government reports and Inquiries Hansard Public records Newspapers, magazines (N.B. now on CD-ROM) Pamphlets Web pages Online discussion groups Accounts (financial) Minutes, memos Returns Surveys/censuses Adverts Handbills Invoices Photographs ?Maps, paintings, films, architecture Examples of documentary sources

  7. Classification of documents (following Scott) • Access • Closed • Restricted • Open-archival • Open-published • Authorship • Personal • Official-private (e.g. hospitals, schools, business) • Official-State (e.g. government, inter-governmental)

  8. Four Research issues Key point: • documents are socially produced.

  9. 1. Authenticity • Who is the ‘true’ author? • Is it a forgery? • e.g. 6 Haydn piano sonatas authenticated by H C Robbins-Langdon but found this year to be forgeries • e.g. the Vinland Map (discovered as forgery in 1974) • e.g. Carlos Casteneda - Amerindian magician. Clever compilation from known ethnographies • Satires • False attribution • Particularly an issue on the Internet

  10. 2. Credibility • Sincerity, accuracy. • Material interests of Author -> their motives • E.g. interests, bribery, sympathies, eye witness or secondary. • Atkinson and Coffey - Documentary Realities • An ontological status, the ‘official view’

  11. 3. Representativeness • Survival and Availability (selective deposit) • Not everything recorded – history from the victor’s perspective, only what people at the time consider important. • Not all docs survive, – weeding, accident, secrecy, scattered.

  12. 4. Meaning • Problem of literal meaning e.g. what is a ‘whitster’ • (= either textile bleacher or metal finisher) • Genre of document (conventions governing different document types) • Stylisation (e.g. use of allegory, allusion & irony) • Point of view & Conditions of production (= Hermeneutic circle)

  13. Recent focus • Semiotics - Internal meanings of document: • Barthes • Meaning lies in system of rules which structure text. • Find these rules and decode hidden meanings of text. • Multiple meanings • Scott follows Giddens, suggests meaning arises from 2 contexts • Intended context • Received context. • Thus interpretation of document’s internal meaning depends on: • Intention and reception.

  14. Analysis of documents • Quantitative • Content Analysis • Count terms, phrases, length of texts etc. • Qualitative • Grounded theory • Qualitative Content Analysis • Hermeneutic/interpretative

  15. Diaries - References • Alaszewski, Andrew M. 2006. Using Diaries for Social Research. London: Sage Publications Ltd. • Louise Corti (1993) Using diaries in social research. Social Research Update 2. University of Surrey. [http://sru.soc.surrey.ac.uk/SRU2.html]

  16. Diaries • Personal diaries vs. self-completion diaries (structured or free text) • Advantages • Good for recall of events or easily forgotten experiences (the mundane) • Can deal with sensitive data • Supplement interviews on day-to-day basis (diary - interview - diary method)

  17. Typical suitable subject matter • How people spend time (e.g. Multinational Time Budget Use Project) • Consumer expenditure (e.g. Family Expenditure Survey -> RPI weightings) • Transport (e.g. National Travel Survey) • + social networks, health, illness, diet, nutrition, family therapy, crime, alcohol and drug use, accidents.

  18. Diary Design • A4 booklet 5-20 pages - most respondents do not carry diary around with them • Inside cover instructions - "to complete soon after event" (Pilot these) • Model of correctly completed diary • 1 page for 1 time period (24 hrs/day/week) - clear layout • Checklists of items • or Guidance on what events need recording • Add set of questions asking: • Was time period typical? • Comments • Explanation of any peculiarities • Long diary - start short then wean to long • Reminders to enter data (bleepers, family, sms)

  19. Data Quality Incomplete recording, inadequate recall • Diary keeping period • Not too short to miss significant events • Not too long to burden respondents • 7 - 14 days typical • Ensure seasonal variations covered • Reporting errors • 1st day shows more reporting • visits to preserve diary keeping habits • Literacy • Participation • Face to face recruitment best • Personal collection to sort out problems

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