Advanced search
1 file | 832.92 KB Add to list

Process tracing : making single case studies transparent and convincing

Ferdi De Ville (UGent) , Niels Gheyle (UGent) , Yf Reykers and Thijs Van de Graaf (UGent)
Author
Organization
Abstract
Process tracing is a single case-study method that allows students to use within-case evidence to explain a specific outcome that they are interested in and/or to test a theory for some general phenomenon or relationship in the social world. The method offers the tools to either test the explanatory value of a given causal theory or to develop a causal theory. The unique advantage of process tracing is that it enables the transparent and convincing development of a causal explanation, translate this explanation into expected empirical observations, and critically assess the explanatory value of empirical observations. These features of process tracing significantly increase the confidence that students can have in their case study work. Process tracing is a method that is increasingly used in qualitative social science research, especially in the fields of comparative politics, international relations and political economy. After having read this chapter, students should be able to: understand and discuss the objectives and key features of process tracing; outline a basic process-tracing research design; develop a causal mechanism for some outcome of interest; operationalize a causal mechanism into expected observations and tests; and critically assess empirical observations.

Downloads

  • (...).pdf
    • full text (Accepted manuscript)
    • |
    • UGent only
    • |
    • PDF
    • |
    • 832.92 KB

Citation

Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:

MLA
De Ville, Ferdi, et al. “Process Tracing : Making Single Case Studies Transparent and Convincing.” Qualitative Data Analysis : Key Approaches, edited by Peter Stevens, SAGE, 2022, pp. 179–208.
APA
De Ville, F., Gheyle, N., Reykers, Y., & Van de Graaf, T. (2022). Process tracing : making single case studies transparent and convincing. In P. Stevens (Ed.), Qualitative data analysis : key approaches (pp. 179–208). London: SAGE.
Chicago author-date
De Ville, Ferdi, Niels Gheyle, Yf Reykers, and Thijs Van de Graaf. 2022. “Process Tracing : Making Single Case Studies Transparent and Convincing.” In Qualitative Data Analysis : Key Approaches, edited by Peter Stevens, 179–208. London: SAGE.
Chicago author-date (all authors)
De Ville, Ferdi, Niels Gheyle, Yf Reykers, and Thijs Van de Graaf. 2022. “Process Tracing : Making Single Case Studies Transparent and Convincing.” In Qualitative Data Analysis : Key Approaches, ed by. Peter Stevens, 179–208. London: SAGE.
Vancouver
1.
De Ville F, Gheyle N, Reykers Y, Van de Graaf T. Process tracing : making single case studies transparent and convincing. In: Stevens P, editor. Qualitative data analysis : key approaches. London: SAGE; 2022. p. 179–208.
IEEE
[1]
F. De Ville, N. Gheyle, Y. Reykers, and T. Van de Graaf, “Process tracing : making single case studies transparent and convincing,” in Qualitative data analysis : key approaches, P. Stevens, Ed. London: SAGE, 2022, pp. 179–208.
@incollection{01GQM5XYYGFST419PJ2213D1BR,
  abstract     = {{Process tracing is a single case-study method that allows students to use within-case evidence to explain a specific outcome that they are interested in and/or to test a theory for some general phenomenon or relationship in the social world. The method offers the tools to either test the explanatory value of a given causal theory or to develop a causal theory. The unique advantage of process tracing is that it enables the transparent and convincing development of a causal explanation, translate this explanation into expected empirical observations, and critically assess the explanatory value of empirical observations. These features of process tracing significantly increase the confidence that students can have in their case study work. Process tracing is a method that is increasingly used in qualitative social science research, especially in the fields of comparative politics, international relations and political economy. After having read this chapter, students should be able to: understand and discuss the objectives and key features of process tracing; outline a basic process-tracing research design; develop a causal mechanism for some outcome of interest; operationalize a causal mechanism into expected observations and tests; and critically assess empirical observations.}},
  author       = {{De Ville, Ferdi and Gheyle, Niels and Reykers, Yf and Van de Graaf, Thijs}},
  booktitle    = {{Qualitative data analysis : key approaches}},
  editor       = {{Stevens, Peter}},
  isbn         = {{9781529730425}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{179--208}},
  publisher    = {{SAGE}},
  title        = {{Process tracing : making single case studies transparent and convincing}},
  url          = {{https://uk.sagepub.com/en-gb/eur/qualitative-data-analysis/book271012}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}