Interpretive Political Science

Date:

09/05/2018 - 11/05/2018

Organised by:

NCRM, University of Southampton

Presenter:

Professor Rod Rhodes, Dr John Boswell and Dr Jack Corbett

Level:

Intermediate (some prior knowledge)

Contact:

Jacqui Thorp, Training and Capacity Building Co-ordinator, NCRM, University of Southampton
Tel: 02380 594069
Email: jmh6@soton.ac.uk

Map:

View in Google Maps  (SO17 1BJ)

Venue:

Building 39, University of Southampton, Highfield, Southampton, Hants

Description:

Many students in the social sciences, especially in political science, public policy and public administration who decide to undertake qualitative or interpretive research feel they are unqualified to do so. They express deep-seated confusion about the reliability and generalizability of data, results, and conclusions. In particular they feel that interpretive approaches lack the type of specialised training that has become commonplace in quantitative political science. The aim of this course is to redress this gap. We will equip students with a toolkit that will enable them to both conceptualise and execute an interpretive project.

The course covers:

  • Situating the interpretive approach in relation to other ways of doing political science research by reference to the philosophical, epistemological, and methodological assumptions on which these approaches are based;
  • The theoretical and analytical tools students need to design and conduct their research project;
  • The toolkit of methods used by interpretive scholars to collect data, including ethnographic and interview-based methods;
  • The standards that will both ensure results are reliable and maximise the impact of findings; and
  • Guidance on the norms and principles used to analyse data in an interpretive project.

By the end of the course participants will:

  • Be able to describe the particular strengths and features of the interpretive approach
  • Be able to develop and justify a sophisticated design for interpretive research
  • Have experience collecting rich qualitative data
  • Have experience interpreting rich qualitative data

This introductory/intermediate course is primarily aimed at PhD students and early career scholars of political science, public policy and public administration, but scholars of other social science disciplines, such as criminology, sociology, planning or legal studies, will also benefit from it.

 

 

Cost:

The fee per teaching day is:

• £30 per day for UK/EU registered students
• £60 per day for staff at UK/EU academic institutions, UK/EU Research Councils researchers, UK/EU public sector staff and staff at UK/EU registered charity organisations and recognised UK/EU research institutions.
• £220 per day for all other participants

All fees include event materials, lunch, morning and afternoon tea. They do not include travel and accommodation costs.

Website and registration:

Region:

South West

Keywords:

Ethnographic Research, Ethnographic Research , Elite Interviewing , Shadowing , Narrative Analysis , Interpretive Analysis

Related publications and presentations:

Ethnographic Research

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