社会科学“案例研究”究竟需要多少个“案例”?(英文).pdf
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1、 http:/ http:/ online version of this article can be found at:DOI:10.1177/1466138108099586 2009 10:5EthnographyMario Luis Smallfield-based researchHow many cases do I need?:On science and the logic of case selection in Published by:http:/ can be found at:EthnographyAdditional services and informatio
2、n for http:/ Alerts:http:/ University of Missouri-Columbia on January 16,Downloaded from How many cases do I need?On science and the logic of case selection infield-based researchMario Luis SmallUniversity of Chicago,USAA B S T R A C TToday,ethnographers and qualitative researchers infields such as
3、urban poverty,immigration,and social inequality face anenvironment in which their work will be read,cited,and assessed bydemographers,quantitative sociologists,and even economists.They alsoface a demand for case studies of poor,minority,or immigrant groups andneighborhoods that not only generate the
4、ory but also somehow speak toempirical conditions in other cases(not observed).Many have respondedby incorporating elements of quantitative methods into their designs,suchas selecting respondents at random for small,in-depth interview projectsor identifying representative neighborhoods for ethnograp
5、hic casestudies,aiming to increase generalizability.This article assesses thesestrategies and argues that they fall short of their objectives.Recognizingthe importance of the predicament underlying the strategies todetermine how case studies can speak empirically to other cases itpresents two altern
6、atives to current practices,and calls for greater clarityin the logic of design when producing ethnographic research in a multi-method intellectual environment.K E Y W O R D Sethnographic methods,generalizability,representativeness,validity,case study,sequential interviewing,extendedcase method,scie
7、ncegraphyCopyright The Author(s),2009.Reprints and permissions:http:/www.sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.navhttp:/ Vol 10(1):538DOI:10.1177/1466138108099586A R T I C L E005-038 099586 Small(D):156x234mm 11/02/2009 14:16 Page 5 at University of Missouri-Columbia on January 16,Downloaded from Probab
8、ly the most memorable of the lectures of Nobel-prize winning physi-cist Richard Feynman was his 1974 commencement address at Caltech,where he described what he calls cargo cult science.Feynman,worriedabout the preponderance of what he believes are pseudo-sciences,comparesthese practices to the cargo
9、 cults of the South Pacific:In the South Seas there is a Cargo Cult of people.During the war they sawairplanes land with lots of good materials,and they want the same thing tohappen now.So theyve arranged to make things like runways,to put firesalong the sides of the runways,to make a wooden hut for
10、 a man to sit in.the controller and they wait for the airplanes to land.Theyre doing every-thing right.The form is perfect.It looks exactly the way it looked before.But it doesnt work.No airplanes land.So I call these things Cargo CultScience,because they follow all the apparent precepts and forms o
11、f scien-tific investigation,but theyre missing something essential,because the planesdont land.(Feynman,1999:2089)Feynmans lecture was devoted largely to practices such as ESP,but the hintsabout social science were difficult to miss.(In fact,he criticized a psychol-ogists advice to his student not t
12、o replicate the studies of others.)Pseudo-scientists were expert imitators but terrible practitioners,adopting the formof science but nothing else.In this respect,his analogy might have beenstronger had he noted that some New Guinean cargo cultists had fashionedtheir own airplanes out of logs,sticks
13、,and leaves,remarkably accuratereplicas that,lacking engines and a foundation in aerodynamics,wouldnever fly(Harris,1974;Worsley,1968).While Feynman probably underestimated the successes of social science,his observations are worth noting by at least one major segment of contem-porary ethnographers,
14、for whom the temptations of imitation have neverbeen stronger.The problem of imitation is not new to social scientists,whofrom the start have argued heatedly(and repeatedly)over the merits ofemulating the natural sciences in pursuit of social scientific methods(Dilthey,1988;Lieberson and Lynn,2002;S
15、aiedi,1993).But today,animportant subset of ethnographic researchers and of qualitativeresearchers more generally faces its own version of that dilemma:whetherto emulate basic principles in quantitative social sciences in establishingstandards of evidence for qualitative work.Some background is nece
16、ssary.1The predicament of ethnographic work in multi-method contextsThe predicament arises from what might seem to be an unqualified accom-plishment,the simmering of the counterproductive debates,which reacheda boiling point during the 1980s,over the relative merits of quantitativeEthnography 10(1)6
17、005-038 099586 Small(D):156x234mm 11/02/2009 14:16 Page 6 at University of Missouri-Columbia on January 16,Downloaded from versus qualitative research.Todays calmer waters have been especiallyregenerative for the fields of urban poverty,social inequality,and immi-gration,where both quantitative and
18、qualitative works flourish,and whereexperts in one methodological tradition frequently cite those in others.Infact,several major studies in these fields have employed,with varyingdegrees of integration,both quantitative and qualitative data,the latterbeing at times interview-based and at times ethno
19、graphic.Examples arePortes and Rumbauts recent studies of the children of US immigrants(Portes and Rumbaut,2001;Rumbaut and Portes,2001),Wilson and hiscolleagues studies of urban conditions in Chicago(Wilson,1996;Wilsonet al.,1987),and England and Edin and their colleagues studies of urbansingle mot
20、hers in the US(see England and Edin,2007).These fields standin contrast to others where,for epistemological,political,or historicalreasons,most practitioners work within a single method or set of methods,as in symbolic interactionism or the interpretive work on culture.But the more cooperative spiri
21、t in urban poverty,social inequality,andimmigration has only spread so far.Despite the more methodologically openenvironment,research in these fields remains dominated by quantitativesociologists,demographers,and even economists(Wacquant,1997;see alsoBurawoy,2005).While important ethnographies in th
22、ese fields continue tobe published and highly cited(e.g.Duneier,1999;Levitt,2001;Pattillo,1999;see Newman and Massengill,2006),most articles in these fieldspublished in the top generalist journals,such as American Journal of Sociology,the American Sociological Review,and Social Forces,remainquantita
23、tive in nature.2The preponderance of statistical research stems inpart from the steady and continuous supply of easily accessible quantita-tive data,such as the decennial US Census,the Current Population Survey,the Panel Study of Income Dynamics,and the National Longitudinal Surveyof Youth,all of wh
24、ich contain many variables related to poverty,immi-gration,urban conditions,neighborhoods,and socio-economic status.Inaddition,urban poverty,social inequality,and immigration(along withcriminology,education,and public health)remain among the most highlyfunded fields in US social science,and the larg
25、est funders in these fields nonprofit organizations and government agencies such as the Russell SageFoundation,the Ford Foundation,the National Science Foundation,the USDepartment of Housing and Urban Development,and the National Insti-tutes of Health have exhibited a greater inclination to fund qua
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