Publication Type

Journal Article

Version

acceptedVersion

Publication Date

11-2020

Abstract

Public administration scholarship reflects a multidisciplinary field in which many theoretical perspectives coexist. However, one of the dark sides of such theoretical pluralism is methodological fragmentation. It may be hard to assess the research quality and to engage with the findings from studies employing different methodologies, thus limiting meaningful conversations. Moreover, the constant race across social sciences to make methodologies more sophisticated may exacerbate the separation between academic and practitioner audiences. To counterbalance these two trends, this article aims at increasing methodological intelligibility in our field. It does so starting from the idea that each methodology entails choices in the conventional phases of research design, data collection, and data analysis, and that these choices must be reported. The paper nails down and exemplifies such reporting needs for five selected methodologies: survey studies, quantitative experimental studies, quantitative observational studies, qualitative case studies and ethnographies. Based on their discussion and comparison, the paper offers a framework composed by functional equivalents, that is to say, the common denominator among methodological reporting needs. Methodological choices that need reporting include the rationale for the selection of a methodology, delimitation of the study, the research instrument, data processing and ethical clearance. Increasing methodological reporting would facilitate dialogues among different methodological communities, and with practitioner readers. All of which would also promote field building in the scholarship of public administration.

Keywords

Methodologies, reporting, research methods, research traditions

Discipline

Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration

Research Areas

Political Science

Publication

American Review of Public Administration

Volume

50

Issue

8

First Page

811

Last Page

824

ISSN

0275-0740

Identifier

10.1177/0275074020933010

Publisher

SAGE

Embargo Period

6-10-2021

Copyright Owner and License

Authors

Additional URL

https://doi.org/10.1177/0275074020933010

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