International Organizations and Research Methods: An Introduction
Editat de Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber, Lucile Maertensen Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 aug 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780472056224
ISBN-10: 0472056220
Pagini: 410
Ilustrații: 7 tables, 15 figures
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESS
Colecția University of Michigan Press
ISBN-10: 0472056220
Pagini: 410
Ilustrații: 7 tables, 15 figures
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESS
Colecția University of Michigan Press
Notă biografică
Fanny Badache is a Post-Doctoral Researcher at the Geneva Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies.
Leah R. Kimber is a Post-Doctoral Fellow at Columbia University and Research Associate at the University of Geneva.
Lucile Maertens is Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Lausanne.
Leah R. Kimber is a Post-Doctoral Fellow at Columbia University and Research Associate at the University of Geneva.
Lucile Maertens is Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Lausanne.
Cuprins
INTRODUCTION. Rethinking Methods of Investigation and International Organizations
Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens
PART 1. OBSERVING
Introduction: Observing
Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens
Chapter 1. Direct Observation
Kari De Pryck and Svenja Rauch
Box a. Observing Spatial Practices
Fiona McConnell
Box b. Digital Observation
Mélanie Albaret
Chapter 2. Participant Observation
Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens
Box c. Multipositionality
Simon Tordjman
Box d. Carnal Sociology
Julie Patarin-Jossec
Box e. Exiting Fieldwork
Frédéric Mérand
Chapter 3. Ethnographic Interviews
Leah R. Kimber and Emilie Dairon
Box f. Reversed Photo-Elicitation
Leah R. Kimber
Interlude I. Frictions of Distance and Proximity. Observing IOs in Action
Birgit Müller
PART 2. INTERVIEWING
Introduction: Interviewing
Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens
Chapter 4. Surveys
Clara Egger and Monique J. Beerli
Box g. Languages and Interviews
James Worrall
Box h. Focus Groups
Marie Saiget
Chapter 5. Semi-Structured Interviews
Mélanie Albaret and Joan Deas
Box i. Interviewing “Beneficiaries”
Lucie Laplace
Box j. Asymetrical interviews
Emilie Dairon
Chapter 6. Biographic Interviews
Monique J. Beerli
Box k. Online Interviews
Leah R. Kimber
Interlude II. Controversies in Interview Research
Annabelle Littoz-Monnet
PART 3. DOCUMENTING
Introduction: Documenting
Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens
Chapter 7. Legal Research
Ian Hurd
Chapter 8. Archives
Ellen J. Ravndal
Box l. Visual Archives
Valérie Gorin
Chapter 9. Visual Methods
Valérie Gorin
Box m. Analyzing Maps
Benoît Martin
Box n. Branding Analysis
Stefan Tschauko
Box o. Artifact Analysis
Julian Eckl
Chapter 10. Document Analysis: a praxiographic approach
Christian Bueger
Box p. Semiology of Websites
Camille Rondot
Box q. Analyzing Tweets
Matthias Hofferberth
Chapter 11. Discourse Analysis
Audrey Alejandro, Marion Laurence and Lucile Maertens
Box r. Studying Ideas
Olivier Nay
Chapter 12. Statistics and Quantification
Roser Cussó and Laure Piguet
Box s. Analyzing Charts, Infographics and Dataviz
Benoît Martin
Chapter 13. Budget Analysis
Svanhildur Thorvaldsdottir and Ronny Patz
Interlude III. What IOs Talk about When They Talk about Themselves, and How They Do It
Davide Rodogno
PART 4. MEASURING
Introduction: Measuring
Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens
Chapter 14. Voting Analysis
Erik Voeten
Chapter 15. Statistical Analyses with IO Data
Fabien Cottier and Heidrun Bohnet
Box t. Navigating Human Resource Statistics
Fanny Badache
Chapter 16. Large-N Data and Quantitative Analyses
Charles B. Roger
Chapter 17. Computerized Text Analysis
Mor Mitrani and Inbar Noy
Chapter 18. Multiple Correspondence Analysis
Constantin Brissaud
Box u. Building Databases on Individuals
Kseniya Oksamytna
Chapter 19. Social Network Analysis
Anna-Luise Chané
Interlude IV. Challenging IOs through Numbers
Simon Hug
PART 5. COMBINING
Introduction: Combining
Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens
Chapter 20. Interviews and Observations
Kari De Pryck
Box v. Challenging Secrecy
Olivier Schmitt
Chapter 21. Observation, Interviews and Archives
Marieke Louis
Chapter 22. Computational Text Analysis and Archival Methods
Evan Easton-Calabria and William Allen
Chapter 23. Qualitative Comparative Analysis
Ryan Federo
Chapter 24. Structured, Focused Comparison
Vytautas Jankauskas, Steffen Eckhard and Jörn Ege
Chapter 25. Process Tracing
Svenja Rauch
Chapter 26. Prosopography
Aykiz Dogan and Frédéric Lebaron
Box w. Research with LinkedIn
Monique J. Beerli
Chapter 27. Practice Analysis
Vincent Pouliot
Chapter 28. Feminist Approaches
Georgina Holmes
Box x. Postcolonial Insights
Soumita Basu
Box y. Reflexivity in Practice
Audrey Alejandro
Chapter 29. Composing Collages: Working at the Edge of Disciplinary Boundaries
Anna Leander
Box z. Expeditions as a Research Method
Doaa Abdel-Motaal
Interlude V. Controversies on Methodological Pluralism
J. Samuel Barkin
Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens
PART 1. OBSERVING
Introduction: Observing
Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens
Chapter 1. Direct Observation
Kari De Pryck and Svenja Rauch
Box a. Observing Spatial Practices
Fiona McConnell
Box b. Digital Observation
Mélanie Albaret
Chapter 2. Participant Observation
Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens
Box c. Multipositionality
Simon Tordjman
Box d. Carnal Sociology
Julie Patarin-Jossec
Box e. Exiting Fieldwork
Frédéric Mérand
Chapter 3. Ethnographic Interviews
Leah R. Kimber and Emilie Dairon
Box f. Reversed Photo-Elicitation
Leah R. Kimber
Interlude I. Frictions of Distance and Proximity. Observing IOs in Action
Birgit Müller
PART 2. INTERVIEWING
Introduction: Interviewing
Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens
Chapter 4. Surveys
Clara Egger and Monique J. Beerli
Box g. Languages and Interviews
James Worrall
Box h. Focus Groups
Marie Saiget
Chapter 5. Semi-Structured Interviews
Mélanie Albaret and Joan Deas
Box i. Interviewing “Beneficiaries”
Lucie Laplace
Box j. Asymetrical interviews
Emilie Dairon
Chapter 6. Biographic Interviews
Monique J. Beerli
Box k. Online Interviews
Leah R. Kimber
Interlude II. Controversies in Interview Research
Annabelle Littoz-Monnet
PART 3. DOCUMENTING
Introduction: Documenting
Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens
Chapter 7. Legal Research
Ian Hurd
Chapter 8. Archives
Ellen J. Ravndal
Box l. Visual Archives
Valérie Gorin
Chapter 9. Visual Methods
Valérie Gorin
Box m. Analyzing Maps
Benoît Martin
Box n. Branding Analysis
Stefan Tschauko
Box o. Artifact Analysis
Julian Eckl
Chapter 10. Document Analysis: a praxiographic approach
Christian Bueger
Box p. Semiology of Websites
Camille Rondot
Box q. Analyzing Tweets
Matthias Hofferberth
Chapter 11. Discourse Analysis
Audrey Alejandro, Marion Laurence and Lucile Maertens
Box r. Studying Ideas
Olivier Nay
Chapter 12. Statistics and Quantification
Roser Cussó and Laure Piguet
Box s. Analyzing Charts, Infographics and Dataviz
Benoît Martin
Chapter 13. Budget Analysis
Svanhildur Thorvaldsdottir and Ronny Patz
Interlude III. What IOs Talk about When They Talk about Themselves, and How They Do It
Davide Rodogno
PART 4. MEASURING
Introduction: Measuring
Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens
Chapter 14. Voting Analysis
Erik Voeten
Chapter 15. Statistical Analyses with IO Data
Fabien Cottier and Heidrun Bohnet
Box t. Navigating Human Resource Statistics
Fanny Badache
Chapter 16. Large-N Data and Quantitative Analyses
Charles B. Roger
Chapter 17. Computerized Text Analysis
Mor Mitrani and Inbar Noy
Chapter 18. Multiple Correspondence Analysis
Constantin Brissaud
Box u. Building Databases on Individuals
Kseniya Oksamytna
Chapter 19. Social Network Analysis
Anna-Luise Chané
Interlude IV. Challenging IOs through Numbers
Simon Hug
PART 5. COMBINING
Introduction: Combining
Fanny Badache, Leah R. Kimber and Lucile Maertens
Chapter 20. Interviews and Observations
Kari De Pryck
Box v. Challenging Secrecy
Olivier Schmitt
Chapter 21. Observation, Interviews and Archives
Marieke Louis
Chapter 22. Computational Text Analysis and Archival Methods
Evan Easton-Calabria and William Allen
Chapter 23. Qualitative Comparative Analysis
Ryan Federo
Chapter 24. Structured, Focused Comparison
Vytautas Jankauskas, Steffen Eckhard and Jörn Ege
Chapter 25. Process Tracing
Svenja Rauch
Chapter 26. Prosopography
Aykiz Dogan and Frédéric Lebaron
Box w. Research with LinkedIn
Monique J. Beerli
Chapter 27. Practice Analysis
Vincent Pouliot
Chapter 28. Feminist Approaches
Georgina Holmes
Box x. Postcolonial Insights
Soumita Basu
Box y. Reflexivity in Practice
Audrey Alejandro
Chapter 29. Composing Collages: Working at the Edge of Disciplinary Boundaries
Anna Leander
Box z. Expeditions as a Research Method
Doaa Abdel-Motaal
Interlude V. Controversies on Methodological Pluralism
J. Samuel Barkin
Recenzii
“This book is a terrific achievement. It not only provides the novice and the experienced researcher with a complete menu of methods to choose from when analyzing international organizations. The authors also take care to address cross-cutting questions of epistemology, positionality, and research ethics that we should all be aware of.”
“Politicians, pundits, and the public undervalue international organizations. Too few scholars understand enough about the nuts-and-bolts to dispel this inaccurate image. Not the team assembled in these pages, however. They detail not only why institutions matter but how to analyze these essential actors in contemporary world politics.”
“This book is original and innovative, as it is the first companion to provide a broad and thoughtful inventory of research methods used in the social sciences and humanities to understand what international organizations are and what they do: so very helpful!”
“International Organizations and Research Methods fills a gaping hole in the IO literature and will be particularly valuable to graduate students and IO researchers with its diversity of methods and authors covering a range of UN specialized agencies and IOs in different issue areas and regions. The book's introduction provides a very useful overview of what the book aims to do and not do and how the editors define methods as a reflexive part of the research process. The innovative use of boxes is a great way to present specific tools and ‘tricks,’ including interviewing in a foreign language and analyzing tweets.”
"[The book] will be useful for students looking for an entry point into a fascinating social world; for researchers wanting to dabble in new methods; for lecturers integrating case-studies from international politics in their teaching; and for practitioners seeking to understand how research is conducted on their employer(s). Consequently, the book provides the first systematic survey of how scholars of international organizations think about their research subject, their own positionality, and their interactions with the institutions themselves."
“Politicians, pundits, and the public undervalue international organizations. Too few scholars understand enough about the nuts-and-bolts to dispel this inaccurate image. Not the team assembled in these pages, however. They detail not only why institutions matter but how to analyze these essential actors in contemporary world politics.”
“This book is original and innovative, as it is the first companion to provide a broad and thoughtful inventory of research methods used in the social sciences and humanities to understand what international organizations are and what they do: so very helpful!”
“International Organizations and Research Methods fills a gaping hole in the IO literature and will be particularly valuable to graduate students and IO researchers with its diversity of methods and authors covering a range of UN specialized agencies and IOs in different issue areas and regions. The book's introduction provides a very useful overview of what the book aims to do and not do and how the editors define methods as a reflexive part of the research process. The innovative use of boxes is a great way to present specific tools and ‘tricks,’ including interviewing in a foreign language and analyzing tweets.”
"[The book] will be useful for students looking for an entry point into a fascinating social world; for researchers wanting to dabble in new methods; for lecturers integrating case-studies from international politics in their teaching; and for practitioners seeking to understand how research is conducted on their employer(s). Consequently, the book provides the first systematic survey of how scholars of international organizations think about their research subject, their own positionality, and their interactions with the institutions themselves."
Descriere
Methodologies for the study of International organizations