Comparative analysis as a basic research orientation: Key methodological problems

Cover Page

Cite item

Abstract

To date, the Sociological Laboratory of the Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia has accumulated a vast experience in the field of cross-cultural studies reflected in the publications based on the results of mass surveys conducted in Moscow, Maikop, Beijing, Guangzhou, Prague, Belgrade, and Pristina. However, these publications mainly focus on the comparisons of the empirical data rather than methodological and technical issues, that is why the aim of this article is to identify key problems of the comparative analysis in cross-cultural studies that become evident only if you conduct an empirical research yourself - from the first step of setting the problem and approving it by all the sides (countries) involved to the last step of interpreting and comparing the data obtained. The authors are sure that no sociologist would ever doubt the necessity and importance of comparative analysis in the broadest sense of the word, but at the same time very few are ready to discuss its key methodological challenges and prefer to ignore them completely. We summarize problems of the comparative analysis in sociology as follows: (1) applying research techniques to the sample in another country - both in translating and adapting them to different social realities and worldview (in particular, the problematic status of standardization and qualitative approach); (2) choosing “right” respondents to question and relevant cases (cultures) to study; (3) designing the research scheme, i.e. justifying the sequence of steps (what should go first - methodology or techniques); (4) accepting the procedures that are correct within one country for cross-cultural work (whether or not that is an appropriate choice).

About the authors

N P Narbut

Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia

Author for correspondence.
Email: npnarbut@rambler.ru

Sociology Chair

I V Trotsuk

Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia

Email: irina_trotsuk@rambler.ru

Sociology Chair

References

  1. Allardt E. Challenges for comparative social research // Acta Sociologica. 1990. Vol. 33. № 183.
  2. Bondarenko D.M., Korotayev A.V. “Early state” in cross-cultural perspective: A statistical reanalysis of Henri J.M. Claessen’s database // Cross-Cultural Research. 2003. Vol. 37.
  3. Burgess E.W., Wallin P. Engagement and Marriage. Chicago, 1953.
  4. Burton M.L., White D.R. Cross-cultural surveys today // Annual Review of Anthropology. 1987. № 16.
  5. Davidov E. Theoretical implications of comparative survey research: Why the wheel of cross-cultural methodology keeps on being reinvented // International Journal of Comparative Sociology. 2010. Vol. 51.
  6. Davidov E., Meuleman B., Cieciuch J., Schmidt P., Billiet J. Measurement equivalence in cross-national research // Annual Review of Sociology. 2014. Vol. 40.
  7. Davidov E., Schmidt P., Schwartz S. Bringing values back in: Testing the adequacy of the European Social Survey to measure values in 20 countries // Public Opinion Quarterly. 2008a. Vol. 72.
  8. Ebbinghaus B. When less is more: Selection problems in large-N and small-N cross-national comparisons // International Sociology. 2005. Vol. 20.
  9. European Social Survey // URL: http://www.ess-ru.ru.
  10. Ganzeboom H. BG., Treiman D.J. Three Internationally Standardised Measures for Comparative Research on Occupational Status // J.H.P. Hoffmeyer-Zlotnik, C. Wolf (Eds.). Advances in Cross-National Comparison. A European Working Book for Demographic and Socio-Economic Variables. N.Y., 2003.
  11. Gatewood J.B. Distributional instability and the units of culture // Ethnology. 2000. Vol. 38.
  12. Hoffmeyer-Zlotnik J.H.P. How to measure race and ethnicity // J.H.P. Hoffmeyer-Zlotnik, C. Wolf (Eds.). Advances in Cross-National Comparison. A European Working Book for Demographic and Socio-Economic Variables. N.Y., 2003.
  13. Hoffmeyer-Zlotnik J.H.P. Harmonisation of demographic and socio-economic variables in cross-national survey research // Bulletin de Méthodologie Sociologique. 2008. Vol. 98. № 5.
  14. Hoffmeyer-Zlotnik J.H.P., Warner U. Methodological discussion of the income measure in the European Social Survey. Round 1 // URL: http://mrvar.fdv.uni-lj.si/pub/mz/mz3.1/hoffmeyer.pdf.
  15. Hoffmeyer-Zlotnik J.H.P., Wolf C. Comparing demographic and socio-economic variables across nations. Synthesis and Recommendations // J.H.P. Hoffmeyer-Zlotnik, C. Wolf (Eds.). Advances in Cross-National Comparison. A European Working Book for Demographic and Socio-Economic Variables. N.Y., 2003.
  16. Inglehart R. Changing values among Western publics from 1970 to 2006 // West European Politics. 2008. Vol. 31.
  17. International Standard Classification of Occupations: ISCO-88. Geneva, 1990.
  18. International Social Survey Programme // URL: http://www.issp.org.
  19. International Standard Classification of Education // J.H.P. Hoffmeyer-Zlotnik, C. Wolf (Eds.). Advances in Cross-National Comparison. A European Working Book for Demographic and Socio-Economic Variables. N.Y., 2003.
  20. Khizrieva A.G., de Munck V.C., Bondarenko D.M. The Moscow School of quantitative cross-cultural research // Cross-Cultural Research. 2003. Vol. 37. № 5.
  21. Korotayev A.V. Unilineal descent organization and deep Christianization: A cross-cultural comparison // Cross-Cultural Research. 2003. Vol. 37.
  22. Lazarsfeld P.F., Leeds R. International sociology as a sociological problem // American Sociological Review. 1962. Vol. 27.
  23. McClelland D.C. The Achieving Society. Princeton, N.J., 1961.
  24. Mills M., van de Bunt G.G., de Bruijn J. Comparative research: Persistent problems and promising solutions // International Sociology. 2006. Vol. 21.
  25. de Munck V.C. Contemporary issues and challenges for comparativists: An appraisal // Anthropological Theory. 2002. Vol. 2. № 5.
  26. de Munck V., Korotayev A. Cultural units in cross-cultural research // Ethnology. 2000. Vol. 38.
  27. Parsons T. Essays in Sociological Theory. Glencoe, 1954.
  28. Rokkan S. The development of cross-national comparative Research: A review of current problems and possibilities // Social Science Information. 1962. Vol. 1. № 21.
  29. Scheuch E.K. Comparative sample surveys: Progress in the cross-cultural use of surveys // S. Rokkan (Ed.). Comparative Research across Cultures and Nations. Paris-The Hague, 1968.
  30. Scheuch E.K. Society as context in cross-cultural comparisons // Social Science Information. 1967. Vol. 6. № 7.
  31. Schwartz S.H. Universals in the content and structure of values: Theoretical advances and 20 countries // Advances in Experimental Social Psychology. Vol. 25 / Ed. by M. Zanna. N.Y., 1992.
  32. Schwartz S.H., Melech G., Lehmann A., Burgess S., Harris M., Owens V. Extending the cross-cultural validity of the theory of basic human values with a different method of measurement // Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology. 2001. Vol. 32. № 5.
  33. World Values Survey // URL: http://www.worldvaluessurvey.org.
  34. Alaev L.B. Opyt tipologii srednevekovykh obshchestv Azii // Tipy obshchestvennykh otnoshenii na Vostoke v srednie veka / Pod red. L.B. Alaeva. M., 1982.
  35. Andreenkova A.V. Mezhstranovye sravnitel'nye issledovaniya v sotsial'nykh naukakh: metodologiya, etapy razvitiya, sovremennoe sostoyanie // Mir Rossii. 2011. № 3.

Copyright (c) 2015 N P Narbut, I V Trotsuk

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

This website uses cookies

You consent to our cookies if you continue to use our website.

About Cookies