Choosing research methods : data collection for development workers
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Choosing research methods : data collection for development workers
(Development guidelines, no. 7)
Oxfam, c1992
- : pbk.
Available at / 7 libraries
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Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto Universityアフリカ専攻
: pbk.361.85016||Pra99049975
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Note
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
ISBN 9780855981761
Description
Written for planners and managers in development and relief agencies, Oxfam Development Guidelines draw on Oxfam's experience to review current thinking on theory and practice in a range of development and relief fields.
- Volume
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: pbk. ISBN 9780855981778
Description
Development workers often need to carry out specific research in order to obtain answers to specific questions about projects and programmes. Choosing Research Methods discusses the various ways in which such research can be carried out and how to select the most appropriate method for particular circumstances. The advantages and disadvantages of a wide range of research methods are assessed, and guidance given on how to decide exactly what information is necessary and how to obtain it, given the resources of time, personnel, and money available. Illustrated with actual examples from the experience of Oxfam and other development agencies, the book is an attempt to demystify research and to explain how it can be effectively incorporated into the development project cycle, even in small-scale, low-cost development programmes. A companion volume to Social Survey Methods, this book considers the broader theoretical issues behind social research and explains and evaluates the different methods of collection in use.
Table of Contents
- * Forward
- * Introduction
- 1. Starting research: some basic issues
- * Identifying a research need
- * The level of participation
- * Expectations aroused by research
- * Constraints on conducting research
- * Government attitudes
- * Conflicts and emergencies
- * Cultural factors: gender relations and power structures
- * Resources
- 2. Strategic issues in planning and sound research
- * The unit of analysis
- * Questions of time
- * The research timetable
- * Continuous research or a snapshot?
- * Objectivity
- subjectivity and the control of bias
- * Representative results
- * Some pitfalls to be avoided
- * Choosing the researchers
- * Local participation and experts
- * Training the field team
- * Styles of research
- 3. The range of research methods
- * Making the most of existing resources
- * Asking questions and interviewing
- * Group interviews
- * Oral testimonies oral histories and life-histories
- * Surveys
- * Sampling
- * The pros and cons of a survey
- * Participant observation
- * Rapid rural appraisal
- * The variety of RRA techniques
- * Collating and presenting RRA findings
- * Limitations of RRA
- * An example of RRA
- * Participatory Rural Appraisal
- 4. General issues affecting most research methods
- * The use of appropriate indicators
- * Validation
- * After research: some crucial questions
- * Bibliography
- * Appendix 1 Checking for questions
- * Appendix 2 Questionnaire design
- * Appendix 3 Some high-tech
- high cost research methods
- * Appendix 4 Logical Framework Analysis
- * Appendix 5 Women and evaluation
- * Appendix 6 Action Research Programme: the methods and approach
- * Index
by "Nielsen BookData"