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New methods – Old (and New) Questions? The Challenge of Developments in Research Design and Methods

Political Methodology
Methods
Qualitative Comparative Analysis
Qualitative
Quantitative
Experimental Design
Survey Research
Big Data
S28
Theofanis Exadaktylos
University of Surrey
Luana Russo
Maastricht Universiteit

Endorsed by the ECPR Standing Group on Political Methodology


Abstract

In the last decade, political data have passed from rarity to abundance. There have been plenty of innovations in the way we create, collect, store, access and decipher data. Advances in technology (e.g., computer capacity, web-tracking/cropping, tracking cookies, machine learning and AI for data analysis, including for qualitative data), institutional capacity (e.g., archiving policies, advertising and marketing strategies, privacy laws), new research programmes (e.g., large-scale electronic surveys, simulation tools and experiments, codification of visual ethnographic data) and new practices (e.g., se of social media, new communications methods) have contributed to these innovations. These advancements and innovations create new conditions and challenges for political science and research design. Can the new methods solve old questions? What are the new questions emerging out of the methodological developments and innovations? If these innovations provide a new lens to political research, how do we deal with them? Some of our existing methods and research design techniques may not be fit for purpose and miss out on the use of new data. Conversely, due to their novelty, new data may have limitations including an overflow of strategic information (by governments or organisations). The new practices of data collection and storage may also create new problems regarding ethics and analysis. How do we safeguard privacy and informed consent in light of the use of ‘big data’? What are the challenges in terms of archiving and reusing interview or ethnographic data? All fields of political research are affected by the presence of new data and new techniques, from political behaviour to political ideologies, public policy, comparative politics, political psychology, ethnography, and discourses. Beyond quantitative methods having benefited from new developments and innovations, qualitative research software has also become a lot more sophisticated as a result of machine learning and digitisation. Some questions have turned from theoretical to empirical as a result, or some political phenomena can be densely documented or triangulated, even in the context of political theory. Our challenge in academia also becomes how do we connect these findings to inform practitioners in their pursuit of new political tools? This section aims to bring together scholars from different fields and traditions together in a fruitful dialogue from sharing thoughts on the above challenges. This is important as methodological silos and demarcations can frequently miss data linkages and connections between methods and also cause duplication of methodological advances. Hence, we welcome panels and papers that demonstrate new data sources and/or new research practices, how have they developed and what are their implications for political methodology. Panels and papers may also deal with how new data sources through new evidence in a field can revive theoretical developments or help bridge theoretical divisions. We also welcome panels or papers that identify challenges in one given subfield or area of our discipline. This section is supported by the ECPR Standing Group on Political Methodology.
Code Title Details
INN093 Ethics in research and quality of findings View Panel Details
INN139 Innovations and key advancement in quantitative research methods View Panel Details
INN181 Measuring democracy View Panel Details
INN299 Researching Trust and Corruption View Panel Details
INN316 Social networks and remote data collection View Panel Details