Rules for Constructing Causal Theories King, Keohane and Verba 99-109.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Social Scientific Method An Introduction to Social Science Research Methodology.
Advertisements

The National Voter Registration Act encouraged voting by A. Requiring states to allow election day registration B. Declaring election day a federal holiday.
Chapter 3: Explanations, Hypotheses, and Making Comparisons.
Writing Academic Essays Andy McKay In-sessional programme English Language Centre Week 2: Structuring Arguments.
Elections and Voting Behavior Chapter 10. How American Elections Work Three types of elections: – Select party nominees (primary elections) – Select officeholders.
ID the IV, DV, unit of analysis, control variable (if any)
LEARNING OBJECTIVES/ GOALS/ SWBAT
Building Blocks of Research Process
Causal-Comparative Research
“Local Political Parties and Young Voters.” Daniel Shea, 2009.
Hypotheses & Research Design
Research Design: Alan Monroe: Chapter 3.
Research Design: Alan Monroe Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) Casuality The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether.
Scientific method - 1 Scientific method is a body of techniques for investigating phenomena and acquiring new knowledge, as well as for correcting and.
“Local Political Parties and Young Voters.” Daniel Shea, 2009.
Research paper format Introduction Theory & Literature Review
Before we begin, please do the following: On the RIGHT PAGE next to the “Third Parties Are Not Minor, They Matter!” write this: – “Chapter 5, Section 3.
The use of the scientific method in Psychology
The USA Study Plan. Country & Western Song Titles How Can I miss You When You Won’t Go Away? I’m So Miserable Without You, It’s Like You’re Still Here.
A2 Psychology.  Psychologists, like all scientists, use the Scientific Method to produce valid explanations of the world around them.  This method has.
Analytical Techniques of Political Science Clip art.
ASSESSING CLAIMS TO KNOWLEDGE How do we assess claims to knowledge in social research?
Chapter 30-3 By Mikey St.Onge. America’s Controversial Politics George W. Bush and Al Gore were the presidential candidates in the most controversial.
Chapter 1: The What and the Why of Statistics
Building Blocks of Research Process Chapter 2: Alan Monroe.
Introducing Government in America. Introduction Politics and government matter. Americans are apathetic about politics and government.
Stop Coddling the Super-Rich By WARREN E. BUFFETT New York Times August 14, 2011.
Writing Skills. Purpose of a Thesis Your Thesis tells the audience your purpose and what you will be discussing in your essay. It MUST contain the following:
The What and the Why of Statistics The Research Process Asking a Research Question The Role of Theory Formulating the Hypotheses –Independent & Dependent.
Begin $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Elected Officials Congress Political Culture Presidency Court Cases Key Terms.
Politics of Same Sex Marriage: Overview Gary M. Segura PS: Political Science and Politics April 2005; 38, 2.
Origins of Research Questions and Process What do research projects look like?
Doing Political science
Review: Levels of Analysis Theory: Concept 1 is related to Concept 2 Hypothesis: Variable 1 (IV) is related to Variable 2 (DV) Operational Definition:
Elections and Campaigns Campaign and Election Reform.
Research Examples and Topics Chapter 1: Janet Buttolph Johnson.
11/8/2015 Nature of Science. 11/8/2015 Nature of Science 1. What is science? 2. What is an observation? 3. What is a fact? 4. Define theory. 5. Define.
22 February From Theory to Evidence. Hypothesis vs. Research Question When no expected direction to relationship. Exploratory research, not deductive.
The Scientific Study of Research Questions Chapter 1: Essentials of Political Research: Alan Monroe.
28 April Crawford School 1 Causality and Causal Inference Semester 1, 2009 POGO8096/8196: Research Methods Crawford School of Economics and Government.
Elections and Voting Behavior Chapter 10. How American Elections Work Three types of elections: –Select party nominees (primary elections) –Select officeholders.
Introducing Government in America Chapter 1. Introduction Politics and government matter. Americans are apathetic about politics and government. American.
Modeling Political Phenomena Using Control Variables and Gauging Validity.
Third Period: Have homework open!. DEFINITION THEME – OUTLINE FORMAT A.Introduction: Attention getter 1.You may want to include the traditional or dictionary.
Introduction to Scientific Research. Science Vs. Belief Belief is knowing something without needing evidence. Eg. The Jewish, Islamic and Christian belief.
PLS 121: American Politics and Government Political Science What is Science?
Political Science Scope and Methods Observation, Measurement, and Political Implications.
Political Science Scope and Methods Observation, Measurement, and Political Implications.
Science As a Process!!!!!. Science A process through which nature is studied, discovered, and understood. A process through which nature is studied, discovered,
Persuasive Writing: From the top down. Step 1: Read the prompt carefully before you begin. Writing Situation: Many eighteen year olds who are old enough.
Writing the Argumentative/Persuasive Essay. What is an Argumentative Essay? The purpose of an argumentative essay is to persuade the reader to accept—or.
Building Blocks of Scientific Research Chapter 5 References:  Business Research (Duane Davis)  Business Research Methods (Cooper/Schindler) Resource.
Robert McNamara In Retrospect Chapter 11 Discussion Questions.
Comparison Paper Purpose: Compare two subjects (ideas, events, experiments, etc.) to help your reader understand their similarities and differences.
George W. Bush 43 rd President Term: Jan 20, 2001 to Jan
Analytical Thinking What This Course Is About: Using Elements Of Social Science To Critically Examine American Society. Goal: Becoming “American Mythbusters”
Politics of Same Sex Marriage: Overview Gary M. Segura PS: Political Science and Politics April 2005; 38, 2.
Research Design: Alan Monroe Chapter 3. The Concept of Causality (31) Casuality The types of research designs reviewed here are all intended to test whether.
Building Blocks of Research Process
Rules for Constructing Causal Theories
Purpose of Research Research may be broadly classified into two areas; basic and applied research. The primary purpose of basic research (as opposed to.
Bi-variate #1 Cross-Tabulation
AP Comparative Government and Politics
The use of the scientific method in Psychology
THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE.
Political Science Scope and Methods
“Local Political Parties and Young Voters.”
The Scientific Process
Rules for Constructing Causal Theories
Research Method II Rules of Constructing Causal Theory
Presentation transcript:

Rules for Constructing Causal Theories King, Keohane and Verba

Rules for Constructing Causal Theories Same as causality: the objective is to demonstrate that a variable causes or causes a change in another variable. Internally Consistent: Theories need to be internally consistent.

Rule 1: Construct Falsifiable Theories A theory incapable of being wrong is not a theory. In fact, a theory should be designed so that: 1) It can be shown to be wrong as easily as possible 2) It is tentative. 3) Should be prepared to reject the theory as soon as possible.

Falsification Theories are NOT verifiable: Too many possible Hypotheses No particular theory can in fact be verified, since there are there are an infinite number of possible hypotheses. Hence, the objective is not to prove a theory, but to test its boundaries of applicability. Falsification A falsified theory does not claim universal application. Rather it admits that it applies only to some circumstances, but not all. It can, then, be proven wrong. It is valid under certain conditions or in a particular setting. There are, in other words, boundaries its applicability.

Falsification Example: Theory: In American politics, presidential campaigns have a very limited effect on voter preferences. Hypothesis: There could be dozens or more: 1) Campaign ads have no effect 2) Debates have no effect Etc.

Falsification We cannot test them all to see if any contradict the theory. It still might be the case, that in some situation, campaigns do have an effect. Solution: we should not try to explain everything. Modify the theory so it asserts less: Theory: In American politics, presidential campaigns have a very limited effect on voter preferences, unless a candidate is viewed as dangerous. (1964) (This is not a universal claim. It boundaries are clearly stated.)

LBJ Video

Rule 2: Build Theories that are Internally Consistent Internal Consistency is related to Reliability Reliability: “is the extent to which an experiment, test, or any measuring procedure yields the same result on repeated trials.” Internal Consistency: If any part of your theory contradicts another, it is internally inconsistent, no evidence from the empirical world will uphold your theory. You cannot say that some population has contradictory practices and beliefs. Formal models: can help with internal consistency.

Rule 3: Select DV Carefully Need to avoid selection bias. Should not select cases on DV DV should not be constant. Do no pick just countries with revolutions, for example, if you want to study the factors that facilitate social revolution. Choose DV that vary Have cases were there were and were not revolutions.

Rules 4 and 5 Rule 4: Maximize Concreteness Need to operationalize hypotheses. Rule 5: State Theories in as Encompassing Way as Feasible Value of generalizations. …

Review: Levels of Analysis Theory: Concept 1 is related to Concept 2 Hypothesis: Variable 1 (IV: Cause) is related to Variable 2 (DV: Effect) Operational Definition: IV: Definition of Cause DV: Definition of Effect

Review: Levels of Analysis Theory: Inequality and Democracy Hypothesis: Inequality (IV) adversely effects Democracy (DV). Operational Definitions: IV: (Inequality): Income Levels DV: (Democracy): Voting IV: (Inequality): Political Contributions DV: (Democracy): Representation IV: (Inequality): Racial Density of City DV: (Democracy): Rate of Government Response

Essay Outlines Introduction: Topic: Inequality and Democracy Question: How does Inequality affect Democracy? Thesis: Racial Inequality (IV) adversely effects Democracy (DV). Hypothesis: The federal response will vary by the racial density of a city. Literature Review: What have other said about the topic? Argument/Analysis: (Operational Definitions): How do you plan to test/demonstrate your argument: IV: (Inequality): Racial Density of City DV: (Democracy): Rate of Government Response (Selection Bias: Look at Variety of DVs: Instances where the government responded to a crisis)

Review: Levels of Analysis Theory: SSM and 2004 Election Hypothesis: State bans on SSM (IV) aided Bush’s reelection (DV). Operational Definitions: IV: (SSM): States with SSM bans on the ballot DV: (Bush Reelection): Republican Voting % by state Selection Bias: Variation on DV DV: (Bush Win): Rep. Voting % in state DV: (Bush Loss): Rep. Voting % in state You cannot just look at states where Bush won. You need to look at states where he lost, and where SSM ban or may not have been on the ballot.

Essay Outlines Introduction: Topic: SSM and 2004 Election Question: How did State bans on SSM impact the Bush’s reelection? Thesis: (Hypothesis): State bans on SSM (IV) aided Bush’s reelection (DV). Literature Review: What have other said about the topic? Argument/Analysis: (Operational Definitions): How do you plan to test/demonstrate your argument: IV: (SSM): States with SSM bans on the ballot DV: (Bush Win): Rep. Voting % in state DV: (Bush Loss): Rep. Voting % in state

Review: Levels of Analysis Theory: Conservatism and US Foreign Policy Thesis: Bush embraced a crusading, unilateral approach to foreign policy. Hypothesis: After Bush’s election (IV), the US became less likely to seek multi-literal support (DV) when confronted by threats from abroad. Operational Definitions: IV: (Bush): His election ( ) DV: (Multi-literalism): Number of US Allies In Afghanistan and Iraq. DV: (Multi-literalism): Number of US Allies In Gulf War I and II (before and after study of Bush). DV: (Multi-literalism): Number of US Allies In Korea, Vietnam, GWI compared with Afghan, GWII (before and after study of Bush, times series).

Review: Levels of Analysis Theory: US Culture and Foreign Policy Thesis: During the Bush years, US Foreign Policy (DV) was defined by a culture of unilateralism (IV). Hypothesis: During the Bush presidency, culture of unilateralism (IV) in the pentagon made it less likely (inversed relationship) for the US to seek international support (DV) for its foreign policy. Operational Definitions: IV: (Unilateralism): Policy/Rhetoric of Pentagon/White House. DV: (Inter. Support): Number of US Allies In Afghanistan and Iraq.

Essay Outlines Introduction: Topic: US Culture and Foreign Policy Question: Is a Culture of Unilateralism shaping US Foreign Policy? Thesis: A Culture of Unilateralism (IV) defines US Foreign Policy (DV). Literature Review: What have other said about the topic? Research Design: Quasi-Experimental: Before and After DV: (US Foreign Policy): Number of US Allies In Iraq during Bush admin DV: (US Foreign Policy): Number of US Allies In Iraq during Obama admin

Essay Outlines Introduction: Topic: US Culture and Foreign Policy Question: Is a Culture of Unilateralism shaping US Foreign Policy? Thesis: (Hypothesis): A Culture of Unilateralism (IV) is shapes US Foreign Policy (DV). Literature Review: What have other said about the topic? Argument/Analysis: (Operational Definitions): How do you plan to test/demonstrate your argument: IV: (Unilateralism): Policy/Rhetoric of White House DV: (US Foreign Policy): Number of US Allies In Iraq DV: (US Foreign Policy): Number of US Allies In Afghanistan

Essay Outlines Introduction: Topic: SSM and 2004 Election Question: How did State bans on SSM impact the Bush’s reelection? Thesis: (Hypothesis): State bans on SSM (IV) aided Bush’sreelection (DV). Literature Review: What have other said about the topic? Argument/Analysis: (Operational Definitions): How do you plan to test/demonstrate your argument: IV: (SSM): States with SSM bans on the ballot DV: (Bush Win): Rep. Voting % by state DV: (Bush Loss): Rep. Voting % by state

Review: Levels of Analysis Theory: Women and Politics Hypothesis: Gender (IV) had a defining effect on Nancy Pelosi’s election as Speaker of the House of Representatives. (DV). Operational Definitions: IV: (Gender): Gender of Candidate DV: (Leadership): Likelihood a Woman are Elected as a Leader.