articleAmerican Political Science ReviewMay 1, 2004Closed access

What Is a Case Study and What Is It Good for?

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Abstract

This paper aims to clarify the meaning, and explain the utility, of the case study method, a method often practiced but little understood. A “case study,” I argue, is best defined as an intensive study of a single unit with an aim to generalize across a larger set of units. Case studies rely on the same sort of covariational evidence utilized in non-case study research. Thus, the case study method is correctly understood as a particular way of defining cases, not a way of analyzing cases or a way of modeling causal relations. I show that this understanding of the subject illuminates some of the persistent ambiguities of case study work, ambiguities that are, to some extent, intrinsic to the enterprise. The…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Complementarity (molecular biology)
  • Epistemology
  • Set (abstract data type)
  • Meaning (existential)
  • Strengths and weaknesses
  • Subject (documents)
  • Case study research
  • Positive economics
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