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Comparing ‘deep’ insider knowledge: developing analytical strategies for cross-national qualitative studies
Wendt, Maria
International Journal of Social Research Methodology. 23(3):241-254
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Title | Comparing ‘deep’ insider knowledge: developing analytical strategies for cross-national qualitative studies |
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Authors | Wendt, Maria |
Source |
International Journal of Social Research Methodology. 23(3):241-254
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Description |
One overarching question in scholarly methodological discussions on qualitative comparative approaches concerns how it is possible to compare and generalise deep insider knowledge across (nationally) specific contexts. The aim of this article is to propose a research strategy that both facilitates the comparison and theorisation of such knowledge across nations and limits the risks of reproducing naturalised national ‘truths’. The strategy is developed within a feminist, cross-national, qualitative comparative analysis of how European countries addressed military deaths in connection with the ISAF mission in Afghanistan. The article underlines the importance of collective analytical work and of strategies that allow continuous movement between insider and outsider positions throughout the research process. A number of analytical strategies are presented: collective project design, alternating between analytical closeness and distance, and de-familiarising writing practices.
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