Syllabus/achievement requirements

To find more detailed information on the syllabus, lectures etc. please go to blyant.uio.no (Fronter) and log in with your username and password. In the folder named PECOS4021 you will find a number of relevant documents for the course.

A=Article

B=Book

BC=Book chapter

Achen, Christopher H. and Duncan Snidal (1989) “Rational deterrence theory and comparative case studies”, World Politics 41, 2: 143-169. 27p. A

Adcock, Robert and Collier, David (2001): “Measurement validity: a shared standard for qualitative and quantitative research”, American Political Science Review 95: 529-546. 18 p. A

Charmaz, Kathy (2003) “Qualitative interviewing and grounded theory analysis”, pp. 311-330 in James A. Holstein and Jaber F. Gudrium (eds.) Inside Interviewing: New Lenses, New Concerns. London: Sage. 20 p. BC

Checkel, Jeff (2008) “It’s the process stupid! Tracing causal mechanisms in European and international politics”, in Audie Klotz (ed.) Qualitative Methods in International Relations: A Pluralist Guide. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. 22 p. BC

Collier, David (2011) “Understanding process tracing”, PS: Political Science and Politics 44, 4: 823-830. 8p. A

Fearon, James D. and David Latin (2008) “Integrating qualitative and quantitative research methods”, in Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier, Henry E. Brady and David Collier (eds.) The Oxford Handbook of Political Methodology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 20 p. BC

Frendreis, John P. (1983) “Explanation of variation and detection of covariation: the purpose and logic of comparative analysis”, Comparative Political Studies 16: 255-272. 18 p. A

Fujii, Lee Ann (2010) “Shades of truth and lies: interpreting testimonies of war and violence”, Journal of Peace Research 47, 2: 231-241. 11 p.

Gaddis, John Lewis (2002). The Landscape of History. How Historians Map the Past. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Ch. 1. 17 p. BC

Geddes, Barbara (1990) “How the cases you choose affect the answers you get: selection bias in comparative politics”, Political Analysis 2, 1: 131-150. 20 p.

Gerring, John (2007) Case Study Research (Cambridge University Press). Ch. 1-6 + Epilogue. 194 p. B

Goertz, Gary (2005) Social Science Concepts (Princeton: Princeton University Press). Ch. 1, 2, 5. 93 p. B

Johnston, Richard (2008) “Survey methodology”, in Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier, Henry E. Brady, and David Collier (eds.) The Oxford Handbook of Political Methodology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 20 p. BC

King, Gary, Robert O. Keohane and Sidney Verba (1994) Designing Social Inquiry. Princeton University Press. Ch. 1-5. 227 p. B Krosnick, Jon A. (1999) “Survey research”, Annual Review of Psychology 50: 537-567. 31 p.

Levy, Jack S. (2008) “Case studies: types, designs, and logic of inference”, Conflict Management and Peace Science 25: 1-18. 18 p. A

Lieberman, Evan S. (2005) “Nested analysis as a mixed-method strategy for comparative research”, American Political Science Review 99, 3: 435-452. 18p. A

Mahoney, James and Gary Goertz (2006) “A tale of two cultures: contrasting quantitative and qualitative research”, Political Analysis 14, 3: 227-249. 23 p. A

Megoran, Nick (2006) “For ethnography in political geography: experiencing and re-imagining Ferghana Valley boundary closures”, Political Geography 25: 622-640. 19 p. A

Posner, Daniel (2004) “The political salience of cultural differences: why Chewas and Tumbukas are allies in Zambia and adversaries in Malawi”, American Political Science Review 98, 4: 529-546. 18 p. A

Rohlfing, Ingo (2008) “What You See and What You Get: Pitfalls and Principles of Nested Analysis in Comparative Research”, Comparative Political Studies 41, 11: 1492-1514. 23p. A

Rueschemeyer, Dietrich (2003) “Strategies of causal assessment in comparative historical analysis”, in James Mahoney and Dietrich Rueschemeyer (eds.) Comparative Historical Analysis in the Social Sciences. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 35 p. BC

Sambanis, Nicholas (2004) “Using case studies to expand economic models of civil war”, Perspectives on Politics 2, 2: 259-279. 21p. A

Tarrow, Sidney (2010) “The strategy of paired comparison: towards a theory of practice”, Comparative Political Studies 43, 2: 230-259. 30 p. A

Trachtenberg, Marc (2006) The Craft of International History: A Guide to Methods. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Ch. 2, 3, 5. 80 p. B

Verwimp, Philip (2003) “Testing the double genocide thesis for central and southern Rwanda”, Journal of Conflict Resolution 47, 4: 423-442. 20 p. A

Weeden, Lisa (2010) “Reflections on ethnographic fieldwork in political science”, Annual Review of Political Science 13: 255-72. 18 p. A

Weyland, Kurt (2009) “The diffusion of revolution: ‘1848’ in Europe and Latin America”, International Organization 63: 391-423. 33p. A

Woodward, James (2011) “Scientific Explanation”, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 16 p. Available at http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2011/entries/scientific-explanation/. A

Total: 1.118 pages

A=Article B=Book BC=Book chapter

Published Mar. 22, 2012 9:30 AM - Last modified Aug. 20, 2012 5:15 PM