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The Discipline and Practice of Qualitative Research

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TLDR
The history of qualitative research in the human disciplines can be traced back to the 1970s and 1980s, when the very existence of qualitative work was at issue as mentioned in this paper, when the evidence-based research movement, with its fixed standards and guidelines for conducting and evaluating qualitative inquiry, sought total domination.
Abstract
The global community of qualitative researchers is midway between two extremes, searching for a new middle, moving in several different directions at the same time. Mixed methodologies and calls for scientifically based research, on the one side, renewed calls for social justice inquiry from the critical social science tradition on the other. In the methodological struggles of the 1970s and 1980s, the very existence of qualitative research was at issue. In the new paradigm war, “every overtly social justice-oriented approach to research . . . is threatened with de-legitimization by the government-sanctioned, exclusivist assertion of positivism . . . as the ‘gold standard’ of educational research” (Wright, 2006, pp. 799–800). The evidence-based research movement, with its fixed standards and guidelines for conducting and evaluating qualitative inquiry, sought total domination: one shoe fits all (Cannella & Lincoln, Chapter 5, this volume; Lincoln, 2010). The heart of the matter turns on issues surrounding the politics and ethics of evidence and the value of qualitative work in addressing matters of equity and social justice (Torrance, Chapter 34, this volume). In this introductory chapter, we define the field of qualitative research, then navigate, chart, and review the history of qualitative research in the human disciplines. This will allow us to locate this handbook and its contents within their historical moments. (These historical moments are somewhat artificial; they are socially constructed, quasi-historical, and overlapping conventions. Nevertheless, they permit a “performance” of developing ideas. They also facilitate an increasing sensitivity to and sophistication about the pitfalls and promises of ethnography and qualitative research.) A conceptual framework for reading the qualitative research act as a multicultural, gendered process is presented. We then provide a brief introduction to the chapters, concluding with a brief discussion of qualitative research. We will also discuss the threats to qualitative human-subject research from the methodological conservatism movement, which was noted in our Preface. As indicated there, we use the metaphor of the bridge to structure what follows. This volume provides a bridge between historical moments, politics, the decolonization project, research methods, paradigms, and communities of interpretive scholars.

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A Typology of Mixed Methods Sampling Designs in Social Science Research

TL;DR: This paper provides a framework for developing sampling designs in mixed methods research and presents sampling schemes that have been associated with quantitative and qualitative research, and provides a sampling design typology.
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Does sample size matter in qualitative research?: A review of qualitative interviews in IS research

TL;DR: Little or no rigor for justifying sample size was shown for virtually all of the IS studies in this dataset, implying the subjective nature of sample size in qualitative IS studies.

The Validity Issue in Mixed Research

TL;DR: In this article, Tashakkori and Teddlie's (2003, 2006) evaluation criteria frameworks involving the concept of inference quality are summarized and nine types of legitimation are described.
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Explaining Society, Critical Realism in the Social Sciences:

TL;DR: Realist Socinl Tlicory: Tlic I\\loriJlio!gciicti( as discussed by the authors is a clear and well-structured introduction to critical i-disrri, one of the most vibrant theoretical streams in the field of social scicnces.
References
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Qualitative Research, Power, and the Radical Right

TL;DR: This article examined the sources of the attacks and revealed a wide network of new and recent foundations with decidedly right-wing political views, the establishment and growing power of the National Association of Scholars, and other well-funded efforts to discredit research that uncovers and exposes deep inequities in social life and schooling on gender, race, social class, religion, and/or sexual orientation.
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Fires in the mirror : Crown Heights, Brooklyn, and other identities

Anna Deavere Smith
- 01 Mar 1993 - 
TL;DR: Fires in the Mirror as discussed by the authors is a play about race relations in a neighborhood where Hasidic Jews, African Americans, Latinos, and others struggled to coexist until the summer of 1991, when a car from the Grand Rebbe's motorcade ran onto the sidewalk, killing seven-year-old Gavin Cato.
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In the roiling smoke: qualitative inquiry and contested fields

TL;DR: In this paper, two British authors reflect on the current state of qualitative research, viewed as a battlefield through roiling smoke, and suggest that there are four important features that good qualitative research should rely on: problematizing education, avoiding ethnocentricism, appreciating the long history, and carrying out proper in-depth ethnographic studies that generate adequately theorized analysis.
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Glimpses of Street Life: Representing Lived Experience Through Short Stories

TL;DR: In this paper, the author has been writing short stories about his experiences with kids who live on the streets of Campinas, Brazil, since his last field trip in 1996, and the goal is to make stories of these lived experiences part of people's understanding of street kids and part of the cultural narratives that shape these kids' everyday lives.