Jones and Barron (both: early childhood studies, Manchester Metropolitan U.) are not demonstrating yet again how gender discrimination continues to haunt academic fields. Rather, they explore how dive
". . . the writing makes this book interesting to all levels of students. Bobko tackles tough issues in an easy way but provides references for more complex and complete treatment of the subject. . .
This book provides a systematic introduction to models, methods and applications of event history analysis. Yamaguchi emphasizes 'hands on' information, including the use and misuse of samples, models
Like all writing, biographies are interpretive. They require no less than organizing into text the chaos of human existence. InInterpretive Biography Denzin combines one of the oldest techniques in th
This provocative volume deals with one of the chief criticisms of ethnographic studies, a criticism which centres on their particularism or their insistence on context -- the question is asked: How ca
Kirk and Miller define what is -- and what is not -- qualitative research. They suggest that the use of numbers in the process of recording and analyzing observations is less important than that the r
This book challenges the hyper-proliferation of concepts in modern social research, presenting a distinctive methodological response based on the exploration of diagrammatic relational spaces, designe