[S] = Shively, W. Phillips. The Craft of Political Research. 6th edition. Routledge, 2004. ISBN: 9780131174405.
WEEK # | TOPICS | READINGS |
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Section I: Method, Causal Inference, and Research Design | ||
1 | The Scientific Method as Applied to Political Outcomes | No readings assigned |
2 | Theory and Method in Political Science |
[S] Chapter 1: Doing Research, pp. 1–4. [S] Chapter 2: Political Theories and Research Topics, pp. 14–27. [S] Chapter 6: Causal Thinking and Design of Research, pp. 75–95. [S] Chapter 11: Where Do Theories Come From?
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3 | Experimental Work and Its Challenges |
McDermott, Rose.
Falk, Armin, and James J. Heckman. Barabas, Jason, and Jennifer Jerit. |
4 | Observational Data and Its Challenges |
[S] Chapter 4: Problems of Measurement: Accuracy. [S] Chapter 5: Problems of Measurement: Precision. [S] Chapter 7: Selection of Observations for Study. [S] Introduction to Statistics: Measuring Relationships for Interval Data. [S] Pp. 146. Fearon, James D., and David D. Laitin.
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5 | Cases Selection and Its Challenges |
Geddes, Barbara. Pape, Robert A. Ashworth, Scott, Joshua D. Clinton, Adam Meirowitz, et al. “Design, Inference, and the Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism.” American Political Science Review 102, no. 2 (2008): 269–73.
Lawson, J. Chappell. “Theses I Wish Someone Would Write (PDF).” |
6 | Evaluating Individual Studies |
Todorov, Alexander, Anesu N. Mandisodza, Amir Goren, et al. “Inferences of Competence from Faces Predict Election Outcomes.” Science 308, no. 5728 (2005): 1623–26. Fryer, Jr., Roland G. "An Empirical Analysis of Racial Differences in Police Use of Force." 2016. Spend at least one hour consulting cases of police use of force (as one example: "Fatal Force: 987 People Have Been Shot and Killed by Police in 2017," Washington Post.), or reading of “de-escalation” and use of force training at a local police department. |
7 | Evaluating a (Small) Body of Work: The Effects of Candidate Appearance |
Antonakis, John, and Olaf Dalgas.“Predicting Elections: Child's Play!” Science 323, no. 5918 (2009): 1183. Enos, Ryan. “Monkey Cage: No, Good Looks Don’t Win Elections," Washington Post, November 13, 2013. Poutvaara, Panu. “How Do Candidates’ Looks Affect Their Election Chances?” IZA World of Labor, 2017. Banducci, Susan A., Jeffrey A. Karp, Michael Thrasher, et al. “Ballot Photographs as Cues in Low-Information Elections.” Political Psychology 29, no. 6 (2008): 903–17. Lenz, Gabriel S., and Chappell Lawson. “Looking the Part: Television Leads Less Informed Citizens to Vote Based on Candidates' Appearance.” American Journal of Political Science 55, no. 3 (2011): 574–89. Lawson, Chappell, Gabriel S. Lenz, Andy Baker,et al. “Looking Like a Winner: Candidate Appearance and Electoral Success in New Democracies.” World Politics 62, no. 4 (2010): 561–93. |
Section II: Collecting Data | ||
8 | Conducting an Experiment (or Generating Quantitative Observational Data), Part I |
Milgram, Stanley. Zimbardo, Phillip G. “The Mind is a Formidable Jailer: A Pirandellian Prison,” New York Times Magazine, April 8, 1973. See also Zimbardo’s description of the Stanford Prison Experiment: A Simulation of the Psychology of Imprisonment. (skim) |
9 | Conducting an Experiment (or Generating Quantitative Observational Data), Part II | No readings assigned |
10 | Conducting Field Research, Part I |
Telma, Kate. “When Castes Collide: PhD student Matt Lowe Uses Cricket Tournaments to Explore Caste Interactions in Rural India and Whether the Popular Sport Can Help Bridge Class Divides”. MIT News. July 20, 2017.
Lawson, Chappell. “Can Field Work Be 'Scientific'? (PDF)”
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11 | Conducting Field Research, Part II: Interviews |
Leech, Beth L. Lawson, Chappell. “Interview Guide (PDF).” |
12 | Student Presentations of Experimental Findings | No readings assigned |
13 | Using Archives, Libraries, and the Like |
Consult the following resources on police shootings in the United States: Tate, Julie, Jennifer Jenkins, Steven Rich, et al. “How The Washington Post is Examining Police Shootings in the United States," Washington Post, July 7, 2016. “The Counted: People Killed by Police in the US,” The Guardian. FBI logs on active shootings by police Banks, Duren, PhD, Paul Ruddle, Erin Kennedy, et al."Arrest-Related Deaths Program Redesign Study, 2015-16: Preliminary Findings." Bureau of Justice Statistics, Office of Justice Programs. (Make sure to look at copies of the actual Form CJ-11A and CJ-12A.) National Violent Death Reporting System, Violence Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. |
14 | Picking Research Questions |
[S] Chapter 2: Political Theories and Research Topics, pp. 27–31. Lawson, Chappell. “Theses I Wish Someone Would Write (PDF).” |