Summary
Contents
Subject index
Thirty-five years ago, the four authors of this book addressed the problems of validity in social science research. They were interested in new and unused methods for obtaining information. The original edition and an expanded version have often been cited as justification for using novel means to supplement, if not replace, conventional techniques, especially survey and archival research. Illustrations abound in this book. While the novelty of the illustrations will keep many a graduate student amused, the more serious purpose is to authorize and motivate ingenuity in obtaining information. Even more fundamental is the strategy of combining very different methods so that research results can, by triangulation, withstand "threats to validity" that so frequently invalidate single-measure, conventional research.
Archives I: The Running Record
Archives I: The Running Record
Possibly a wife was more likely to get an inscribed tablet if she died before her husband than if she outlived him.
The tablet cited here is a tombstone, and the quotation is from Durand's (1960) study of life expectancy in ancient Rome and its provinces. Tombstones are but ...
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