Publication | Closed Access
Case Study Methods in the International Relations Subfield
276
Citations
73
References
2007
Year
Empirical Case StudySocial SciencesDiplomacyIr Case StudiesManagementInternational PoliticsInternational BusinessGlobal StrategyGeopoliticsInternational ManagementInternational RelationsCase Study MethodsInternational Relation TheoryInternational LawWorld PoliticsBusinessCase StudyInternational OrganizationCase AnalysisPolitical ScienceCase Studies
This article reviews the key role that case study methods have played in the study of international relations (IR) in the United States. Case studies in the IR subfield are not the unconnected, atheoretical, and idiographic studies that their critics decry. IR case studies follow an increasingly standardized and rigorous set of prescriptions and have, together with statistical and formal work, contributed to cumulatively improving understandings of world politics. The article discusses and reviews examples of case selection criteria (including least likely, least and most similar, and deviant cases); conceptual innovation; typo-logical theories, explanatory typologies, qualitative comparative analysis, and fuzzy-set analysis; process tracing; and the integration of multiple methods.
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