Paradigms - basic concepts Flashcards

1
Q

What is a research paradigm?

A

A research paradigm is the basic belief system or worldview that guides the investigator, not only in choices of method but in ontologically and epistemologically fundamental ways (Guba & Lincoln, 1994, pp. 105).

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2
Q

What four major research paradigms can we define?

A

In Research Methods 1 unit 1 we distinguish four different research paradigms: positivism, post-positivism, critical theory and constructivism.

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3
Q

On what 5 axes do research paradigms in social sciences/development studies differ?

A

Research paradigms in social sciences/development studies differ on their ontology, epistemology, methodology, reflexivity and positionality.

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4
Q

What is ontology?

A

Ontology studies the form and nature of reality and, therefore, what there is that can be known about it.

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5
Q

What is realist ontology?

A

A realist ontological view entails that:

  • social phenomena confront us as external facts
  • individuals are born into a pre-existing social world
  • social forces and rules exert pressure on actors
  • these social forces can be apprehended as context-free generalisations, cause-effect laws.
  • culture exists independently of social actors who are socialised into its values.
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6
Q

What is constructionist ontology?

A

A constructionist ontological view entails that:

  • social phenomena and their meanings are constructed by social actors
  • continually accomplished and revised
  • researchers’ accounts of events are also constructions - many alternative interpretations
  • language and representation shape our perceptions of reality
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7
Q

What is epistemology?

A

Epistemology studies the nature of the relationship between the knower or would-be knower and what can be known.

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8
Q

What is objectivist epistemology?

A

An objectivist epistemological view entails:

  • the application of natural science methods to social science research
  • phenomenalism/empiricism: knowledge via the senses
  • deductivism: theory testing
  • an objective, value-free researcher
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9
Q

What is subjectivist epistemology?

A

A subjectivist epistemological view entails:

  • subject matter of the social sciences (people) demands non-positivist methods
  • concerned with the theory and method of the interpretation of human action
  • hermeneutic-phenomenological tradition
  • Verstehen: interpretative understanding of social action (Weber 1947)
  • attempts to see world from the actor’s perspective: subjective reality
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10
Q

What is methodology?

A

Methodology studies how the inquirer (would-be knower) can go about finding out whatever he or she believes can be known.

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11
Q

What is the difference between research methodology and research methods?

A

Research methodology is concerned with defining a strategy on how to elicit the knowledge that the researcher believes can be known, while a research method is a technique or instrument for collecting data.

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12
Q

What is reflexivity?

A

Reflexivity is the act of observing yourself as a researcher/practitioner/activist taking into account context factors such as culture, history, relationships, .. that are shaping you.

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13
Q

What is the positionality of a researcher?

A

The positionality of a researcher is concerned with the involvement with and relationship to what he/she studies as well as the voice and involvement of the researcher in using the created knowledge for policy making.

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