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      Data Access and Research Transparency in the Qualitative Tradition

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      PS: Political Science & Politics
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          As an abstract idea, openness is difficult to oppose. Social scientists from every research tradition agree that scholars cannot just assert their conclusions, but must also share their evidentiary basis and explain how they were reached. Yet practice has not always followed this principle. Most forms of qualitative empirical inquiry have taken a minimalist approach to openness, providing only limited information about the research process, and little or no access to the data underpinning findings. What scholars do when conducting research, how they generate data, and how they make interpretations or draw inferences on the basis of those data, are rarely addressed at length in their published research. Even in book-length monographs which have an extended preface and footnotes, it can sometimes take considerable detective work to piece together a picture of how authors arrived at their conclusions.

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          Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) and Fuzzy-Sets: Agenda for a Research Approach and a Data Analysis Technique

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            An Introduction to Crisp Set QCA, with a Comparison to Binary Logistic Regression

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              Author and article information

              Journal
              applab
              PS: Political Science & Politics
              APSC
              Cambridge University Press (CUP)
              1049-0965
              1537-5935
              January 2014
              December 2013
              : 47
              : 01
              : 43-47
              Article
              10.1017/S1049096513001777
              dce8420a-8684-42cd-b4bc-6b55a08a9c81
              © 2014
              History

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