Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-pftt2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-30T16:21:26.829Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A Case for Description

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 November 2023

Carolyn E. Holmes
Affiliation:
University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA
Meg K. Guliford
Affiliation:
Drexel University, USA
Mary Anne S. Mendoza-Davé
Affiliation:
California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, USA
Michelle Jurkovich
Affiliation:
University of Massachusetts, Boston, USA
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Descriptive research—work aimed at answering “who,” “what,” “when,” “where,” and “how” questions—is vital at every stage of social scientific inquiry. The creative and analytic process of description—through concepts, measures, or cases, whether in numeric or narrative form—is crucial for conducting research aimed at understanding politics in action. Yet, our field tends to devalue such work as “merely descriptive” (Gerring 2012), subsidiary to or less valuable than hypothesis-drive causal inference. This article posits four key areas in which description contributes to political science: in conceptualization, in policy relevance, in the management and leveraging of data, and in challenging entrenched biases and diversifying our field.

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of American Political Science Association

The emphasis on a “more scientific” understanding of politics, associated with generalization and parsimony, that has dominated the discipline since the behavioral revolution has privileged a causal approach to understanding the social world. Conversely, descriptive inquiry has a diminished role and status in the discipline. It often is regarded as messier, less important, or ancillary. Yet, scholars across methodological, epistemological, and subfield divides benefit from engaging in descriptive work. In response, we organized a series of collaborative workshops and roundtables focused on description as a social science enterprise. These gatherings served as a basis for discussing what “counts” as description in social science and what it contributes to the research process. By sharing insights from our collaborations, this article examines the contributions of descriptive research and presents an argument for its importance, in regard to both hypothesis-driven inquiry and as a standalone strategy and method.

Separate from the emphasis of causal research, descriptive research aims to answer “who,” “what,” “when,” “where,” and “how” questions.Footnote 1 It is both a creative and an analytic process. Although “describing often involves practices which, like copying and translating, [which] tend…to be associated with lack of originality and novelty, description is neither neutral nor passive, nor does it simply entail transcribing or reenacting the given” (Weinstein 2022). This is because description involves making choices in the categorizing, sense making, and management of data.

Given the central role of description in political science, a brief discussion of its history (and eventual marginalization) is important. The behavioral revolution in political science was articulated by Merriam (Reference Merriam1926) as an approach closely aligned with the natural sciences by Key as an effort to make research “more effective” (Reference Key1950, 20); by Truman (Reference Truman1951, 37) as an “emphasis on empirical methods…[in] the development of a science of the political process”; and by Dahl (Reference Dahl1961, 768) as “the modern scientific outlook.” It was a Kuhnian paradigm shift in the study of politics. Evolving through and with the expansion of computing technology in the mid- to late-twentieth century, the behavioral turn in political science is deeply linked with the application of empirical methods to data to yield causal arguments. This approach was consistent through the elaboration of the natural science model in works such as Designing Social Inquiry (King, Keohane, and Verba Reference King, Keohane and Verba1994) as well as in the Perestroika movement, which urged methodological pluralism (Monroe Reference Monroe2005) but did not question the underlying need for predominantly hypothesis-driven causal arguments.

This emphasis on causality has led to a decline in the prevalence of descriptive research in our field, which can be observed through the decrease of descriptive articles published in major field journals or in the phrasing that often accompanies such work as merely descriptive (Gerring Reference Gerring2012). We surveyed four major political science journals in 2022Footnote 2 and found a total of 32 articles (i.e., approximately 10.2% of the total articles) in which scholars used description as a primary tool of analysis.Footnote 3 Although description has been recognized as an “important step” for explanation, descriptive work still is considered in service of explanation rather than on its own (see, e.g., King, Keohane, and Verba Reference King, Keohane and Verba1994, 18). Although our survey found many scholars actively engaging in descriptive work, it often was in the service of other types of inquiry.Footnote 4

In the early 2000s, many scholars published work defending description within the discipline by pointing to the contributions of descriptive work in theory building (Shapiro Reference Shapiro2002), measurement validity (Adcock and Collier Reference Adcock and Collier2001), and conceptualization (Wedeen Reference Wedeen2002), among others. Yet, the discipline continues to focus on the role of descriptive work in service of making causal arguments (Gerring Reference Gerring2012) rather than as a standalone endeavor. Description, on its own and not in the service of inference, allegedly “loses most of its interest” (King, Keohane, and Verba Reference King, Keohane and Verba1994, 34).

We disagree. Workshop participants highlighted the importance of description in its own right to several important conceptual, theoretical, and policy-related conversations. Description is central to policy-informing research, which often answers questions about the dynamics of a policy problem and offers expertise on context and interventions. In research design, scholars spend considerable time outlining conceptualization, delimitation, and measurement to clarify the parameters of their study. This helps with sharing results and replicating studies. Description also can be leveraged to understand data collected in data-poor environments, in which data are scarce or difficult to collect; in data-rich environments in which “big data” interventions require a new understanding of the terrain of inquiry; or when major shifts have forced a reassessment of formerly settled concepts or measures. In this way, description challenges biases in the discipline.

This article focuses on moving the discussion forward by emphasizing the role of descriptive research in and of itself. First, we outline the importance of thorough description in conceptualization and how negligence limits contestation and collaboration. Second, we demonstrate the importance of descriptive work underpinning data repositories and how rich description helps scholars to understand new and emerging contexts. Third, we examine the benefits for policy makers and the media, who seek informed and curated description of contexts. Fourth, we conclude by providing a state of the field in terms of where description currently fits and ways it can enhance the discipline.

CONCEPTUALIZATION AND COHERENCE

Concepts and their application, incidence, and measurement are foundational in social science; however, good conceptual work requires description. The parameters of key concepts—for example, how many deaths make a civil war or how many electoral turnovers make for a democracy—are important to define so that coherence of research is ensured across time and place as well as among researchers. For example: What counts as a battlefield death in cross-national datasets? The counts are a descriptive endeavor, and they differ significantly between datasets (Restrepo, Spagat, and Vargas Reference Restrepo, Spagat and Vargas2006). In their research comparing datasets in their counts of civilian fatalities, Broache et al. (Reference Broache, Cronin-Furman, Lake and Yu2022, 3) found that several high-profile datasets have glaring omissions, basing their counts on dubious sources that consequently result in unsystematic undercounting in key cases. They argued that “When thousands of civilian deaths are left uncounted, political scientists’ knowledge of war—and the conclusions and implications they draw from them—remains at worst, dangerous, and at best, incomplete.” Yet, research using these data rarely engages with these debates beyond a footnote or literature-review citation.

The fundamental assumption in devaluing descriptive work is that the data are not the point of inquiry. Rather, inquiry comes after the data. This assumption limits the ability of researchers to either contest or build on findings. The potential to have works that nominally contest the dynamics of key concepts—such as civil wars, liberalism, and democracy—but fail to engage with one another because of incommensurable measures or definitions increases.

The fundamental assumption in devaluing descriptive work is that the data are not the point of inquiry. Rather, inquiry comes after the data. This assumption limits the ability of researchers to either contest or build on findings.

Descriptive work can define new concepts, such as the role of graffiti in articulating dissent and protest in authoritarian contexts (Lerner Reference Lerner2021) and state formation in the digital space (Yad, Raymond, and Muratbek 2022). Descriptive research also can clarify or recontextualize concepts that are foundational to our discipline such as norms (Jurkovich Reference Jurkovich2020), citizenship (O’Brochta 2022; Porisky 2022), totalitarianism (Kaul 2022), and the changing frames and identities activated in protests (Sosa-Villagarcia 2022). Establishing new concepts also is a fundamentally descriptive endeavor (Biswas 2022; Chan 2022). In the absence of descriptions that are linked to the grounded study of the social world, “…social facts are underdetermined—not enough is known to draw analytical, scientific conclusions. Previously unknown phenomena still existed prior to being described by researchers, and those phenomena were learned about through description, even if in non-scientific language” (Reiling 2022, 2).

Concepts in political science are a precursor to their application or measurement in analysis, and careful conceptualization is an inherently descriptive exercise. Scholars must consider “the question ‘What is?’ before asking ‘How much?’ Thus, meaning before measurement; quality before quantity” (Collier and Gerring Reference Collier, Gerring, Collier and Gerring2009, 4). In a recent conceptualization article, Zaks (Reference Zaks2023, 1) emphasized this tension as “scholars are exploring the causes and consequences of the phenomenon of rebel-to-party transition without agreement on (or debate about) what it actually is.” Moreover, although there are various defensible and valid ways to define “democracy,” a scholar using Huntington’s (Reference Huntington1991) two-turnover test and another using Dahl’s (Reference Dahl2008) observable dimensions of polyarchy are unlikely to be mutually intelligible without clear statements of their conceptual apparatus and supporting justifications for use. Understanding not only the definitions of the concepts we study but also their evolution and extension is necessary to make scholarship intelligible across the discipline.

MANAGING DATA: BIG AND SMALL

The processes of data collection, curation, and management are central to social scientific work across methodological and ontological paradigms. Whether in the strict empiricist sense of data as “the basic building block of knowledge”—without reference to subjectivity of the researcher or the phenomenon (Taylor Reference Taylor1971, 7) or in the interpretive sense as a contextually generated and intersubjective set of meaning-laden observations (Schatz Reference Schatz2009)—data are the descriptive foundation of subsequent analysis. Yet, the collection and curation of data rarely are discussed as the substance of political science research, often relegated to a methods section in qualitative projects or in articles debuting a new dataset for quantitative research.

However, across methodological approaches, data shape the types of projects that political scientists pursue as well as the types of results achieved by those projects. The availability of collected and curated data can fundamentally shape the questions that researchers ask (Cappella-Zielinski and Grauer 2022) because “if quality data is lacking, researchers turn away from asking and answering key research questions entirely, leaving marked gaps in scholarship on key issues” (Konken 2022).

Existing datasets, as often is acknowledged in the articles that outline their creation, are compiled using many and varied judgments, rendering the complexities of the social world as fixed data points (see, e.g., Boix, Miller, and Rosato Reference Boix, Miller and Rosato2013). Yet, these choices often are obscured in subsequent analysis. For example, the Eck and Hultman (Reference Eck and Hultman2007) dataset on violence against civilians counts deaths in the United States in the context of incidences of international terrorism (e.g., the September 11 attacks) but not domestic terrorism or violence by the state (e.g., incidents of police brutality). Without robust descriptive work, such critical understanding is not possible.

When data do not exist for the questions or phenomena under scrutiny, then collecting them is a descriptive undertaking, which often is made invisible in published projects because it is considered ancillary to analysis. Yet, work on emergent phenomena—such as social media as a protest tool in Kazakhstan (Wood Reference Wood2022), online democratic organizing among romance-novel fans (Fattore 2022), organizing around and against the participation of trans athletes (Murib Reference Murib2023), and the emerging political-consultancy industry in India (Sharma 2022)—requires description to understand novel circumstances and dynamics. Other more long-standing but understudied subject areas—such as family-leave policies in Latin America militaries (Perera 2022) and the hyper-local politics of regulation (Wright 2022)—require new data collection. Data collection might be integral to understanding peripheral and deviant phenomena, including criminal activities and networks (Nussbaum 2022), the aesthetics of revolution (Wade 2022), the intentions of perpetrators of mass violence (Garrity, Reference Garrityforthcoming), and the emergence of militia organizations (Avery 2022). In each case, the collection of data—including the standardizing of those observations for subsequent analysis—is a fundamentally descriptive exercise. It involves the expenditure of resources—money for travel or access and time in recording, standardizing, and coding data—but is rarely the focus of interest for publications. The invisibility of this work means that scholars who chose to pursue creating such data repositories are subject to significant additional burdens, rendered invisible by the devaluation of their descriptive work.

When data do not exist for the questions or phenomena under scrutiny, then collecting them is a descriptive undertaking, which often is made invisible in published projects because it is considered ancillary to analysis.

With the emergence of “big data” in political science (see, e.g., Brady Reference Brady2019), the need to define variables or phenomena of interest is central to being able to leverage massive caches of data to understand the social and political world. Creating and maintaining datasets of densely populated phenomena—such as US campaign emails (Cepuran 2022), the proceedings of an international law commission (Holthoefer 2022), presidential agenda-setting (Eissler 2022), and international climate governance (Zebek 2022)—are a challenge not because of the lack of data but rather the abundance. Curating data that already exist also is a descriptive exercise, insofar as it involves understanding a new terrain of data where the researcher must define (or redefine within new data landscapes) new phenomena or concepts of interest.

When our discipline privileges the causal or theoretical application of the data rather than its creation, there are profound losses in terms of what is studied, valued, and ultimately understood. Whether researchers are operating within the parameters of a given dataset, creating their own from data-poor environments, or managing and leveraging large new forms or points of data, description provides the basis for a deeper understanding of the social and political world. This call to value description, however, is not intended as a license for endless digression into the minutia of data collection, a “remaking of the wheel” with every project. Rather, it is intended as an invitation to revalue the foundational work of data collection and curation as foundational—rather than ancillary—to social science.

POLICY RELEVANCE AND PUBLIC-FACING RESEARCH

Although the subject of policy or public relevance occasionally is debated as a goal of political science (see, e.g., Rogowski Reference Rogowski2013), to the extent that there is an ambition to inform the policy-making process or the public at large, description is a central piece of the process. Informed and curated description of events and circumstances often is a front-line request by policy makers and mass media outlets, insofar as the expertise brought by political scientists can contextualize key points of tension and problems (Seay 2022; Shively 2022). Policy makers and the public want to know the who-what-when-where-how of complicated policy problems, which is currently evident especially in areas such as climate policy (Albistegui Adler 2022). Thorough qualitative description can help policy makers by cautioning them from excessive attention to outliers or in changing the framing of events with attention to cultural or institutional differences across contexts (Peh 2022).

Through generating summaries of data samples, statistical description can illuminate trends over time or illustrate the center, scope, and outliers of data samples. Additionally, experts can help to craft descriptive narratives to understand the precursors and key moments that have led to a particular point of public interest or a policy challenge (Lakin 2022) or to adjudicate among different explanations for outcomes (Harbin 2022). This work is important in part because “descriptive statistics, case studies, and similar material may be more valuable and accessible for policy makers and citizens, who typically learn and reason via discrete operating principles (or theory) as well as descriptive evidence” (Shively 2022).

THE STATE OF THE FIELD

As a field that takes seriously the social and political world, political science benefits from how description helps us to understand how we reflect or re-create the biases that exist in the world. Questions of whose voices are heard or assume prominence in the discipline are founded not only on questions of who is speaking but also who is listened to and heard. Description acknowledges the complexity of the world (Barkin 2022) and makes space for the experience of people who have been subject to or participants in the phenomena of interest to social scientists (Hooser 2022). Focusing on received concepts or assuming that default models from prior generations are universal often results in conceptual silences or in the application of deficit models to minoritized groups (e.g., Black women legislators) when they are compared with their counterparts (Brown Reference Brown2014). As Avant (Reference Avantforthcoming) argues, “Prizing theorization over description…deters attention from what is not already represented in the field. It makes it harder to notice new insights and discourages even trying.” As Michener, SoRelle, and Thurston (Reference Michener, SoRelle and Thurston2022, 164) argued, description allows for the “incorporati[on] of the voices and experiences of hard-to-reach populations…[and] collecting (and valuing) descriptive research…tells us things we do not know about people’s lives; shifting our lenses so that scholarship focused on marginalized groups is not depicted as narrow or atheoretical….”

Without descriptive work to carve out new ways of thinking through concepts and phenomena from new points of view, we risk re-creating the silences of prior generations of social scientists. As Thomas (2022) stated, “[T]he research designs and the social scientific practices we employ to describe what we observe as social scientists in our field is not separate from the ontological and epistemological ways in which the social world is framed by hegemonic sites of power, and thus, our methodological enterprises are grounded in materialist orientation and historical contexts that give rise to them.” In valuing descriptive work, especially when paying attention to many and diverse voices, we can begin to see the contours of such inherent biases and work to counter their influence (Rublee 2022).

Without descriptive work to carve out new ways of thinking through concepts and phenomena from new points of view, we risk re-creating the silences of prior generations of social scientists.

In making space for new voices in political science, descriptive work also has the potential to create new visions of our discipline as an inherently creative endeavor because “focusing on what questions, even if they cannot be entirely separated from why, primes scholars to understand more about social and political interactions. This generates greater openness to seeing the patterns that disrupt conventional wisdom….Noticing new patterns can also foster creative ways to think about them. Attention to description on its own terms helps scholars guard against trapping themselves in models that are inadequate for solving problems in the world” (Avant 2022, 4). Conversely, by sidelining description, the discipline is in danger of creating an “environment [that] encourages scholars to develop an overabundance of causal theories to justify their work as ‘innovative.’ It also creates incentives either to develop highly stylized evidence or to return regularly to the same, well-established pools of evidence rather than seeking out wider horizons” (Shively 2022). Descriptive work can broaden our scope of what scholars think of as political—or even as data—whether it is the definition, placement, and availability of greenspaces (Cantwell-Chavez Reference Cantwell-Chavez2021); the role of art in politics (Weinstein 2022); the definition and evolution of church–state relations in Africa (Longman 2022); or the contributions of emotion in foreign policy (Kowert 2022). Descriptive work also facilitates interdisciplinarity and broadens possibilities for collaboration (Hyder 2022).

CONCLUSION

Understanding the social and political world is fundamental to the enterprise of social scientific research, and the series of roundtables and conferences that we organized has called for a focus on the importance of descriptive work: in allowing our field to develop concepts, manage and leverage data, speak to policy makers and the public, and challenge inherited biases. Answering questions of “who,” “what,” “when,” “where,” and “how”—in concert with but also independent from causal inquiry—is vital to the continued relevance and coherence of our discipline in both scholarly and public-facing work. For several decades, description has been sidelined as ancillary to analytic approaches to the study of politics. Yet, as this article contends, description is essential at all stages of the research process—conceptualization, measurement, and data management—as well as in different types of research—purely academic, public facing, or policy relevant—in challenging embedded biases and making room for new visions of the discipline. It is vital to understand the world that we seek to explain throughout the enterprise.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank the American Political Science Association for funding our workshops through the Centennial Fund, the Artinian Fund for Publishing, and the Centennial Center Special Projects Fund. We also thank the Cyber Governance and Policy Center at the University of Oklahoma for providing funding. We are grateful to the University of Massachusetts Boston for hosting our workshops and the Dean for providing funding.

CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

The authors declare that there are no ethical issues or conflicts of interest in this research.

Footnotes

1. Gerring (Reference Gerring2012, 722, 743 [emphasis in original]) articulated a similar definition, stating that a descriptive argument “aims to answer what questions (e.g., when, whom, out of what, in what manner) about a phenomenon or a set of phenomena” and that “an empirical proposition that attempts to answer a what, when, whom, out of what, or in what manner question is classified as descriptive.” Some readers might question the inclusion of “how” as a question answered through descriptive research. Certainly, some “how” questions may be causal in nature—and debates about “why” versus “how possible” questions are already well documented (e.g., Wendt Reference Wendt1998)—but many “how” questions/answers are not. “How” questions can describe processes (e.g., how to register to vote), quantities/qualities (e.g., how much of X or Y, or how does X make voters feel), and measurements of scale/distance (e.g., extent, how long, how far), among many others.

2. The survey included full-length research articles in the American Political Science Review, Perspectives on Politics, Journal of Politics, and International Organization.

3. American Political Science Review published 88 total articles, of which 13.6% were primarily descriptive; Perspectives on Politics published 54 total articles, of which 7.4% were primarily descriptive; Journal of Politics published 139 total articles, of which 6.5% were primarily descriptive; and International Organization published 32 articles, of which 18.8% were primarily descriptive.

4. Of the 313 articles published in 2022 in the four journals, 11.8% contained descriptive analysis in support of other types of inquiry. An additional 7.3% had descriptive data or approaches in their appendices.

References

REFERENCES

Adcock, Robert, and Collier, David. 2001. “Measurement Validity: A Shared Standard for Qualitative and Quantitative Research.” American Political Science Review 95 (3): 529–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Avant, Deborah. Forthcoming. “Between Probability and Possibility: Fostering Productive Research in a Dystopian Moment.” International Studies Review.Google Scholar
Boix, Carles, Miller, Michael, and Rosato, Sebastian. 2013. “A Complete Data Set of Political Regimes, 1800–2007.” Comparative Political Studies 46 (12): 1523–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brady, Henry E. 2019. “The Challenge of Big Data and Data Science.” Annual Review of Political Science 22 (1): 297323.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Broache, M. P., Cronin-Furman, Kate, Lake, Milli, and Yu, Agnes. 2022. “The Uncounted Dead: Aerial Bombardment and Civilian Fatalities in Conflict Data.” Montreal: American Political Science Association Annual Meeting & Exhibition.Google Scholar
Brown, Nadia E. 2014. Sisters in the Statehouse: Black Women and Legislative Decision Making. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cantwell-Chavez, Devon Kyla. 2021. “City Climate Action Planning in U.S. Cities and Ho Chi Minh City: A Comparative Analysis.” Salt Lake City: The University of Utah. www.proquest.com/docview/2734038592/abstract/935DB9432A4A492APQ/1.Google Scholar
Collier, David, and Gerring, John. 2009. “Introduction.” In Concepts and Methods in Social Science: The Tradition of Giovanni Sartori, ed. Collier, David and Gerring, John, 110. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Dahl, Robert A. 1961. “The Behavioral Approach in Political Science: Epitaph for a Monument to a Successful Protest.” American Political Science Review 55 (4): 763–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dahl, Robert A. 2008. Polyarchy: Participation and Opposition. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Eck, Kristine, and Hultman, Lisa. 2007. “One-Sided Violence Against Civilians in War: Insights from New Fatality Data.” Journal of Peace Research 44 (2): 233–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garrity, Meghan M. Forthcoming. “‘Ethnic Cleansing’: An Analysis of Conceptual and Empirical Ambiguity.” Political Science Quarterly. www.meghanmgarrity.com/peer-reviewed-articles.html.Google Scholar
Gerring, John. 2012. “Mere Description.” British Journal of Political Science 42 (4): 721–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huntington, Samuel P. 1991. The Third Wave: Democratization in the Late Twentieth Century. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.Google Scholar
Jurkovich, Michelle. 2020. “What Isn’t a Norm? Redefining the Conceptual Boundaries of ‘Norms’ in the Human Rights Literature.” International Studies Review 22 (3): 693711.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Key, V. O. 1950. “Political Behavior.” Items 4 (2): 20. https://items.ssrc.org/print-archive.Google Scholar
King, Gary, Keohane, Robert O., and Verba, Sidney. 1994. Designing Social Inquiry: Scientific Inference in Qualitative Research. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lerner, Alexis M. 2021. “The Co-Optation of Dissent in Hybrid States: Post-Soviet Graffiti in Moscow.” Comparative Political Studies 54 (10): 1757–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Merriam, Charles E. 1926. “Progress in Political Research.” American Political Science Review 20 (1): 113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Michener, Jamila, SoRelle, Mallory, and Thurston, Chloe. 2022. “From the Margins to the Center: A Bottom-Up Approach to Welfare-State Scholarship.” Perspectives on Politics 20 (1): 154–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Monroe, Kristen Renwick. 2005. Perestroika! The Raucous Rebellion in Political Science. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Murib, Zein. 2023. Terms of Exclusion: Rightful Citizenship Claims and the Construction of LGBT Political Identity. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Porisky, Alesha. 2020. “The Distributional Politics of Social Transfers in Kenya.” Rochester, NY: Social Science Research Network Scholarly Paper. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3716806.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Restrepo, Jorge A., Spagat, Michael, and Vargas, Juan F.. 2006. “Special Data Feature; The Severity of the Colombian Conflict: Cross-Country Datasets Versus New Micro-Data.” Journal of Peace Research 43 (1): 99115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogowski, Ronald. 2013. “Shooting (or Ignoring) the Messenger.” Political Studies Review 11 (2): 216–21. https://doi.org/10.1111/1478-9302.12015.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schatz, Edward. 2009. Political Ethnography: What Immersion Contributes to the Study of Power. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shapiro, Ian. 2002. “Problems, Methods, and Theories in the Study of Politics, or What’s Wrong with Political Science and What to Do about It.” Political Theory 30 (4): 596619.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, Charles. 1971. “Interpretation and the Sciences of Man.” Review of Metaphysics 25 (1): 351.Google Scholar
Truman, David B. 1951. “The Implications of Political Behavior Research.” Items 5 (4): 3739.Google Scholar
Wedeen, Lisa. 2002. “Conceptualizing Culture: Possibilities for Political Science.” American Political Science Review 96 (4): 713–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wendt, Alexander. 1998. “On Constitution and Causation in International Relations.” Review of International Studies 24 (5): 101–17. www.jstor.org/stable/20097563.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wood, Colleen. 2022. “Going Viral During a Pandemic: Civil Society and Social Media in Kazakhstan.” New York: Columbia University. www.proquest.com/docview/2724279074?parentSessionId=0AKVO0bkNuypw95i48BZaNY0siEdjRTwo3phrI5Iqic%3D&pq-origsite=primo.Google Scholar
Zaks, Sherry. 2023. “Do We Know It When We See It? (Re)-Conceptualizing Rebel-to-Party Transition.” Journal of Peace Research. DOI:10.1177/00223433221123358.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

CONFERENCE CITATIONS

Just Telling It Like It Is: Descriptive Research in Political Science , April 22–23, 2022. Boston. www.carolyneholmes.com/descriptive-research-conference.Google Scholar
Avery, Alison. “Militia Group Involvement in Mass Atrocities.”Google Scholar
Biswas, Bidisha. “Descriptive Research in Public-Facing Scholarship: Some (Scattered) Thoughts.”Google Scholar
Cappella Zielinski, Rosella, and Grauer, Ryan. “The Case for Dataset Building by Qualitative Scholars.”Google Scholar
Cepuran, Colin. “Fundraising Emails in the 2020 Federal Elections.”Google Scholar
Eissler, Rebecca. “What and When? Description as a Method in the Policy Process Literature.”Google Scholar
Fattore, Christina. “Belonging, Insecurity, and Narrative: Investigating the Political Motivations of the Romancelandia Community During Election 2020.”Google Scholar
Holthoefer, Anne. “Description in Practice: International Primary Source Data on Preferences Formation in the International Law Commission.”Google Scholar
Konken, Lauren C. “Time for a Shoulder Check: Problematizing the Turn Away from Descriptive Research in IPE.”Google Scholar
Kowert, Paul. “Describing the Emotional Terrain of Foreign Policy.”Google Scholar
Longman, Timothy. “Understanding Church Politics in Africa: Descriptive Analysis as a Source for Theoretical Insights.”Google Scholar
Perera, Fabiana Sofia. “Parental Leave Policies in the Armed Forces in Latin America.”Google Scholar
Reiling, Carrie. “If a Forest Is Not Known to Exist, Does a Tree That Falls There Have Any Value? Descriptive Research as Theory Production.”Google Scholar
Rublee, Maria Rost. “Diversity in the Academy: The Importance of Descriptive Research.”Google Scholar
Sharma, Amogh Dhar. “‘You Can’t Buy Our Services’: An Ethnographic Account of India’s Political Consultants and Their Worldview.”Google Scholar
Sosa-Villagarcia, Paolo. “Mobilizing Culture: The Radicalization of Right-Wing Grassroots Movements in Peru.”Google Scholar
Wade, Christine J. “Memory, Aesthetics, and Revolution.”Google Scholar
Yad, Wania, Raymond, Mark, and Muratbek, Ayazhan. “Cyber State-Building as Twenty-First-Century State Formation.”Google Scholar
Just Telling It Like It Is: Descriptive Research in Political Science , October 28–29, 2022. Boston. www.carolyneholmes.com/descriptive-research-conference.Google Scholar
Adler, Albistegui, Garrett, M. “Climate Shocks and Governmental Responses, Building a New Dataset.”Google Scholar
Avant, Deborah. “The Role of Description.”Google Scholar
Barkin, J. Samuel. “You Can’t Just Tell It Like It Is: Or, Why Description Is Always an Exercise and Theory.”Google Scholar
Chan, Alexsia. “Conceptualizing Hidden Power through Generative Description.”Google Scholar
Harbin, Brielle. “Using Descriptive Research to Better Theorize What It Means to ‘Know’ in American Politics.”Google Scholar
Hooser, Kara. “When Significant Experiences Aren’t Statistically Significant: Feminist Storytelling as Critical Social Science in Peace Research.”Google Scholar
Hyder, Misbah. “The Importance of Describing Islam(s) for Political Science.”Google Scholar
Kaul, Shasta. “Why Description?”Google Scholar
Lakin, Samantha. “Narrative, Description, and Storytelling as Tools for Policy Advising.”Google Scholar
Nussbaum, Brian. “Spies, Cartels, Hackers, and Whistleblowers: Describing Those Who Do Not Want to Be Described.”Google Scholar
O’Brochta, William. “Where Does Description Start? Emphasizing Measurement.”Google Scholar
Peh, Kimberly. “Taking Language Seriously: The Effect of Language on Conflicts and Foreign Policies.”Google Scholar
Seay, Laura. “African Politics, Descriptive Research, and Public Policy at The Monkey Cage.Google Scholar
Shively, Jacob. “Foreign Policy Analysis and Description as Method.”Google Scholar
Thomas, Lahoma. “Troubling Descriptive Research Methods: A Black Feminist Interpretivist Approach.”Google Scholar
Weinstein, Tania Islas. “Describing Art and Politics.”Google Scholar
Wright, Andrene Z. “From the Roots: A Call for More Descriptive Research in Local Politics.”Google Scholar
Zebek, Alan. “Global Energy Governance and Regime Complexity.”Google Scholar
Just Telling It Like It Is: Descriptive Research in Political Science , April 22–23, 2022. Boston. www.carolyneholmes.com/descriptive-research-conference.Google Scholar
Avery, Alison. “Militia Group Involvement in Mass Atrocities.”Google Scholar
Biswas, Bidisha. “Descriptive Research in Public-Facing Scholarship: Some (Scattered) Thoughts.”Google Scholar
Cappella Zielinski, Rosella, and Grauer, Ryan. “The Case for Dataset Building by Qualitative Scholars.”Google Scholar
Cepuran, Colin. “Fundraising Emails in the 2020 Federal Elections.”Google Scholar
Eissler, Rebecca. “What and When? Description as a Method in the Policy Process Literature.”Google Scholar
Fattore, Christina. “Belonging, Insecurity, and Narrative: Investigating the Political Motivations of the Romancelandia Community During Election 2020.”Google Scholar
Holthoefer, Anne. “Description in Practice: International Primary Source Data on Preferences Formation in the International Law Commission.”Google Scholar
Konken, Lauren C. “Time for a Shoulder Check: Problematizing the Turn Away from Descriptive Research in IPE.”Google Scholar
Kowert, Paul. “Describing the Emotional Terrain of Foreign Policy.”Google Scholar
Longman, Timothy. “Understanding Church Politics in Africa: Descriptive Analysis as a Source for Theoretical Insights.”Google Scholar
Perera, Fabiana Sofia. “Parental Leave Policies in the Armed Forces in Latin America.”Google Scholar
Reiling, Carrie. “If a Forest Is Not Known to Exist, Does a Tree That Falls There Have Any Value? Descriptive Research as Theory Production.”Google Scholar
Rublee, Maria Rost. “Diversity in the Academy: The Importance of Descriptive Research.”Google Scholar
Sharma, Amogh Dhar. “‘You Can’t Buy Our Services’: An Ethnographic Account of India’s Political Consultants and Their Worldview.”Google Scholar
Sosa-Villagarcia, Paolo. “Mobilizing Culture: The Radicalization of Right-Wing Grassroots Movements in Peru.”Google Scholar
Wade, Christine J. “Memory, Aesthetics, and Revolution.”Google Scholar
Yad, Wania, Raymond, Mark, and Muratbek, Ayazhan. “Cyber State-Building as Twenty-First-Century State Formation.”Google Scholar
Just Telling It Like It Is: Descriptive Research in Political Science , October 28–29, 2022. Boston. www.carolyneholmes.com/descriptive-research-conference.Google Scholar
Adler, Albistegui, Garrett, M. “Climate Shocks and Governmental Responses, Building a New Dataset.”Google Scholar
Avant, Deborah. “The Role of Description.”Google Scholar
Barkin, J. Samuel. “You Can’t Just Tell It Like It Is: Or, Why Description Is Always an Exercise and Theory.”Google Scholar
Chan, Alexsia. “Conceptualizing Hidden Power through Generative Description.”Google Scholar
Harbin, Brielle. “Using Descriptive Research to Better Theorize What It Means to ‘Know’ in American Politics.”Google Scholar
Hooser, Kara. “When Significant Experiences Aren’t Statistically Significant: Feminist Storytelling as Critical Social Science in Peace Research.”Google Scholar
Hyder, Misbah. “The Importance of Describing Islam(s) for Political Science.”Google Scholar
Kaul, Shasta. “Why Description?”Google Scholar
Lakin, Samantha. “Narrative, Description, and Storytelling as Tools for Policy Advising.”Google Scholar
Nussbaum, Brian. “Spies, Cartels, Hackers, and Whistleblowers: Describing Those Who Do Not Want to Be Described.”Google Scholar
O’Brochta, William. “Where Does Description Start? Emphasizing Measurement.”Google Scholar
Peh, Kimberly. “Taking Language Seriously: The Effect of Language on Conflicts and Foreign Policies.”Google Scholar
Seay, Laura. “African Politics, Descriptive Research, and Public Policy at The Monkey Cage.Google Scholar
Shively, Jacob. “Foreign Policy Analysis and Description as Method.”Google Scholar
Thomas, Lahoma. “Troubling Descriptive Research Methods: A Black Feminist Interpretivist Approach.”Google Scholar
Weinstein, Tania Islas. “Describing Art and Politics.”Google Scholar
Wright, Andrene Z. “From the Roots: A Call for More Descriptive Research in Local Politics.”Google Scholar
Zebek, Alan. “Global Energy Governance and Regime Complexity.”Google Scholar