| Richard A. Swanson - Business & Economics - 1997 - 256 pages
...flexible. Denzin and Lincoln Miles and Huberman (1994) are examples of this school of thought: "We think that social phenomena exist not only in the mind but...reasonably stable relationships are to be found among them" (p. 4). QUALITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS (1994) describe this as "a bricolage, that is, a pieced-together,... | |
| Benjamin F. Crabtree - Social Science - 1999 - 434 pages
...in an explicit form for interpretation. Miles and Huberman (1994) are very clear about their belief "that social phenomena exist not only in the mind...reasonably stable relationships are to be found among them" (p. 4). They are concerned about transcending the historical, social, and meaning-making processes... | |
| Derek Wall - Nature - 1999 - 246 pages
...insights of critical realism to develop practical techniques for examining qualitative data. Arguing that 'social phenomena exist not only in the mind...stable relationships are to be found among them', they suggest that 'lawfulness' comes from 'regularities and sequences that link together phenomena'.... | |
| Business & Economics - 2001 - 446 pages
...to atone for the limitations of that approach. Soft-nosed logical positivism, maybe . . . We believe that social phenomena exist not only in the mind but also in the objective world - and that there are some lawful and reasonably stable relationships to be found among them. In part, of course,... | |
| Roman Grunwald - Business & Economics - 2003 - 288 pages
...eine Ordnung auf, die immer auch anders ausfallen kann " „That means we think that social phenomcna exist not only in the mind but also in the objective...reasonably stable relationships are to be found among them. The lawfulness comes from the regularities and sequences that link together phenomena. From these panerns... | |
| Gene Early - Executive ability - 2005 - 308 pages
...in me, rather than a demand for action in him. That helped me in other situations as well. "[SJocial phenomena exist not only in the mind but also in the objective world— and. ..some lawful and reasonably stable relationships are to be found among them.... From these patterns... | |
| Clifton F. Conrad, Ronald C. Serlin - Education - 2006 - 632 pages
...example in the qualitative genre is Miles and Huberman's (1984) approach exemplified by their assertion that social phenomena exist not only in the mind but also in the objective world — and that there are some lawful and reasonably stable relationships to be found among them. . . . Our task is... | |
| Michael Quinn Patton - Social Science - 2002 - 692 pages
...doing, provide a succinct summary of the reality-oriented approach to qualitative research: We believe that social phenomena exist not only in the mind but also in the objective world — and that there are some lawful and reasonably stable relationships to be found among them — Given our belief... | |
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