100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Summary Research Design & Methods: Module 2 Case Study Designs R147,47   Add to cart

Summary

Summary Research Design & Methods: Module 2 Case Study Designs

 7 views  0 purchase
  • Course
  • Institution
  • Book

3 Lectures + all Web Lectures + Creswell & Creswell Chapter 1 & 9 + Article from Flyvbjerg: Five Misunderstandings About Case-Study Research + Article from Tracy: Qualitative Quality: Eight “Big-Tent” Criteria for Excellent Qualitative Research My grade with this summary: 8,6

Preview 4 out of 35  pages

  • No
  • H1 & h9
  • April 18, 2023
  • 35
  • 2022/2023
  • Summary
avatar-seller
Module 2: Case Study Design

Why picking a case study?
Case study research is a qualitative research method that involves in-depth analysis of a single case
or a few selected cases, such as an individual, a group, an organization, an event, or a
phenomenon. With the aim to gain comprehensive understanding of the case/s. Typically involves
multiple sources of data: interviews, observations, documents, and artifacts. There are a few types
of case studies, descriptive, exploratory, explanatory, with each their strengths and weaknesses.

Pros: ability to provide rich and detailed insights into complex phenomena

Cons: research is limited by its small sample size and lack of generalizability to other cases or
populations.



Chapter 1 Creswell & Creswell
Case study
Case studies are an approach to selecting research objects -> who/what will you study

It is not a method of data collection in itself

You can do a case study with a survey questionnaire

- Way of thinking about the setting in which you want to do your research
- Few research units (focus on: people, organizations, places, events)
- In depth understanding of what is going on
- Triangulation to verify your findings ( to look at the same objects of research)
- On site
- Various forms of data collection are possible (survey, interview,…)
- N is low (organizations, people)

Types:

- Single case (example: how Schiphol deals with the municipality: there is only 1 Schiphol)
- Multiple case (more airports in Europe)
- Comparative case (comparing airport Eindhoven with Schiphol)

But:

Contextualize

Focus is difficult

Quality is hard to monitor (comparability)

Strong: internal validity (if operationalized well) Weaker: External validity, Replications

,Lecture 1: Case Study Design + Web Lecture 1.1
Defining Case Study Research
Research Strategy: Case Study
Pros: One of the most used in research because it can provide rich data and interesting findings

Cons: more difficult to write down and time intensive research strategy



Defining case study research

Case study is “a strategy for doing research which involves an empirical investigation of a particular
contemporary (happening now) phenomenon (something that is going on: can be a person,
organization, event, place) within its real life context (a phenomenon within its context) using
multiple sources of evidence” (Robson, 1993)

- You go out there wherever the phenomenon is happening and study it within the context.
- You use multiple sources of evidence
- Qualitative field (qualitative data generations: interviews, observations, participant
observation but also documents)
- Talk to people, observe them and collect documents they keep about their activities)

Case study is “an intensive study of a single case or a small number of cases that promises to shed
light on a larger population of cases (Gerring and cojocaru, 2016).

- Intensive and systematic investigation of a phenomenon
- The idea behind it is that we can say something about a larger population of cases



A case: A case connotes a spatially bounded phenomenon/ “plot.

Example: municipality, political party, public organization, or person observed at a single point in
time or over some delimited period of time

A population: A population is comprised of a “sample” (=studied cases), as well as unstudied cases.

A sample: A sample is comprised of one “case” or several “cases” and each case is observed at
discrete points in time. Sample = studied cases



 Example: Why do citizens protest turn violent? (case Rotterdam corona manifestations,
storming of parliament in Washington/ Brazil).
 Why study the case in Rotterdam and not in Washington? -> Because this case is exceptional,
everyone had to deal with the measurements but why did it turn violent in Rotterdam?



Case Victor Leborgne: (impaired speech but intact comprehension)

In the 19th century: language function

Distributed through the brain

,Leborgne lost his speech and could in the end only speak out a single world. Examination by Broca of
Leborgne’s brain showed that part of his left frontal lobe was damaged (Broca’s area). Broca’s area =
responsible for speech production.

 A case of psychiatric illness (phenomenon of interest)



Empirical situation/practice (empirical instance: case -> concept)

Violent coronavirus protests in Rotterdam (in 2021) -> What is it a case of? -> citizen protests ->
research question: why do citizen protests turn violent?

Y= violent citizen protests= phenomenon of interest

Exploratory research: identifying factors that cause Y

Theoretical interest: (concept -> empirical instance; case)

Political crises: role of administrators in political crisis

Research question: how do administrators navigate political crises? -> demarcation: not in the past,
but in the current political landscape (time); in the Netherlands (space) -> what is/are a case(s)
herof? -> political crisis in Amsterdam after the resignation of alderman U. in 2019




Case selection & justification

Before you take off… its good to think through what you aim for in your study (bearing in mind
scientific knowledge about your phenomenon of interest)

 Description (descriptive) (interpretive approaches)

Get an understanding of how things go (descriptive), what matters, without aiming for causal claims
(narrative)

 To identifying patterns (exploratory)

Get an understanding of how things connect (f.i. co-evolution, sequence, co-occurrence)

 To making or reinforcing causal claims (explanatory) (towards more positivist approaches)

, Value of case study for scientific knowledge production (scientific value: what does it bring us?)

Justifying case study research is not easy because it is often criticized that it does not bring
generalizable results. (What can we learn from this specific case in relation to the broader universe of
similar cases?)

Arguments why case studies are valuable:

- Context-dependent knowledge: the fact that it is contextual is that makes the knowledge
gathered through case studies to valuable, because context can greatly impact how things
play out and what factors are at play. For example by examining the specific context in which
an event or situation occurred, case studies can provide valuable insights that may not be
apparent through more general or abstract analyses.
- Force of example: grasp of how people lives, but heavily depends on the selection of cases.
Helps dealing/understanding with complex problems that are hard to understand by
examining a real world example.
In depth understanding of ambiguities and complexities of real world: case studies give
greater inside in the complexity and contradictions of real life. It can provide a deeper
understanding of the factors that contributed to particular outcomes. It is exactly the deep
details that communicates what is really going on in the real world that is so valuable. Good
to help making better decisions and avoid common pitfalls.



Key considerations in case study research (1): fit with research question

Before embarking in case study research: Make sure this strategy fits your research question and
methodological choices (interpretive-qual; pos-qual)

Case study research fits any kind of research

- Descriptive (because it can examine the relationship between variables)
- Exploratory (because it can give you those initial insights in to the phenomenon that you
need withing exploratory research)
- Explanatory (it allows you to explain why the phenomenon is happening, helps explain the
causal relationship/mechanism)



Key considerations in case study research (2) case selection

- Single case study? e.g. implementation of the environmental and planning act in Rotterdam
- Multiple case study? e.g. implementation of the environmental and planning act in five
municipalities (Utrecht, Eindhoven, Rotterdam, Amsterdam, Den Haag)

Always challenging to justify your choice of case/s -> strategic consideration

If the results are generalizable towards a larger population depends on the strategic selection of
cases of composing the sample.

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through EFT, credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying this summary from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller larsvr73. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy this summary for R147,47. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

76669 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy summaries for 14 years now

Start selling
R147,47
  • (0)
  Buy now