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Methodology: Who Needs It?
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Methodology: Who Needs It?



January 2011 | 224 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd

The literature on social science methods and the issues surrounding them has grown massively and continues to increase. Yet many social scientists are ambivalent about methodology. For some, it plays a central, perhaps even an all-encompassing, role; while, for others, it is desirable only in small amounts, or indeed is regarded as an irrelevance, as a distraction from actually doing research.

In this book, Martyn Hammersley argues that, in large part, this reflects and is part of a wider problem: the gradual decline of a previously influential academic model of inquiry. This has occurred as a result of ideological challenges and the erosion of the institutional conditions that support academic work. He defends this model, spelling out the demands it places upon social scientists, and examining such issues as the proper role of methodology, the nature of objectivity, the false idea that social scientists should be intellectuals or social critics, the dialectic of academic discussion, the ethics of belief, and the limits of academic freedom.


 
Introduction
 
PART ONE: THE ROLE OF THE RESEARCHER: LIMITS, OBLIGATIONS AND VIRTUES
 
Methodology, Who Needs It?
 
On the Social Scientist as Intellectual
 
Should Social Science Be Critical?
 
Objectivity as an Intellectual Virtue
 
Too Good to Be False? The Ethics of Belief
 
PART TWO: THE DIALECTIC OF KNOWLEDGE PRODUCTION
 
Models of Research: Discovery, Construction and Understanding
 
Merely Academic? A Dialectic for Research Communities
 
Academic Licence and Its Limits: The Case of Holocaust Denial
 
Epilogue

It didn't fit my course needs.

Dr Matthew Miles
Political Science, Brigham Young Univ-Idaho
December 13, 2014

Sample Materials & Chapters

Chapter 1: Methodology, Who Needs It?


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