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2: History and Development of the Empirical Study of Politics

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    76157
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    • 2.1: Brief History of Empirical Study of Politics
      Empiricism is research that seeks patterns and explanations for general phenomena and specific cases. Empirical political science has its roots in the study of institutions. However, it took off methodologically with the behavioral wave in the 1950s. This was a shift to the study of human behavior, such as voting patterns.
    • 2.2: The Institutional Wave
      The traditional wave of methodology in political science is institutionalism, or the study of institutions in a society. Institutions often reflect the bargains made between actors in each society that determine how the rules of society should look like, which is why they are difficult to reform, replace, or dismantle. Institutionalism ebbed during the heyday of the behavioral revolution. However, the desire to bring institutions back has led to the development of neoinstitutionalism.
    • 2.3: The Behavioral Wave
      Behavioralism is the study of political behavior and emphasizes the use of surveys and statistics. Charles Merriam at the University of Chicago had an outsized influence on behavioralism. The “Chicago School” has strongly influenced political science, through its emphasis on quantitative methodology, often at the expense of normative questions. Many incoming scholars are expected to understand statistical techniques for use in their research.
    • 2.4: Currents- Qualitative versus Quantitative
      There are two major currents in political science: the qualitative methodological and quantitative methodological currents. Methods are simply the steps taken by social scientists during their research. They are the techniques used to collect, construct, and consider data. Qualitative methods solve puzzles in political science without using some type of mathematical analysis. Whereas, quantitative methods prefer the use of mathematical analysis or measurement.
    • 2.5: Currents- Politics- Normative and Positive Views
      The normative view of political science explores what should be, while the positive view explains what is. These views are important to recognize, since both have their supporters and detractors. As a student of political science, it is useful to be able to identify both views. And it is up to you when, how, and why you use one view, or another, or even both, to explore, explain and analyze political actors, behaviors, institutions, and processes.
    • 2.6: Emerging Wave- Experimental Political Science
      Experimental political science is growing in the discipline. It centers on the researcher using random assignment in laboratory settings or quasi-random assignment in other settings, to explore precise cause-and-effect relationships between a treatment and outcome of interest.
    • 2.7: Emerging Wave- Big Data and Machine Learning
      The emerging waves of Big Data and machine learning are just beginning to influence political science. Big Data is the growing mountain of data being generated by political actors and institutions. And machine learning is the increasingly sophisticated way of sifting, sorting, and identifying patterns in these mountains of data.
    • 2.8: Key Terms/Glossary
    • 2.9: Summary
    • 2.10: Review Questions
    • 2.11: Critical Thinking Questions
    • 2.12: Suggestions for Further Study


    This page titled 2: History and Development of the Empirical Study of Politics is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Josue Franco, Charlotte Lee, Kau Vue, Dino Bozonelos, Masahiro Omae, & Steven Cauchon (ASCCC Open Educational Resources Initiative (OERI)) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.