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Bounding the Case
The very concept of a case study implies the possibility of demarcating, hence drawing boundaries around, the specific case to be studied, but the term case study is often used without a clear conceptualization of what constitutes the case or its boundaries. Furthermore, case studies address phenomena at a wide variety of scales, from whole societies through entities like business corporations or social movements, to more specific settings such as prisons or communities, to more focused scenes of interaction or aspects of biography. Thus it may be difficult to formulate general principles with which to address the bounding of the case, and the conceptualization of such boundaries is recognized to be problematical, a point Robert K. Yin incorporates into his very definition of the case study as a research design.
It is, nevertheless, important to address the different ways in which case studies can be bounded, and in particular to distinguish between commonsense, theoretical, and methodological ways of conceptualizing the spatial and temporal boundaries surrounding specific case studies. These distinctions can be discerned in the literature, though they often remain implicit. Furthermore, each approach illuminates the processes of designing, conducting, and analyzing case studies, though theoretical bounding arguably remains the most fundamental. This entry provides a conceptual overview of the problem and discusses its application.
Conceptual Overview and Discussion
The Commonsense Bounding of the Case
Case studies are often focused on entities that have relatively clearly defined spatial boundaries as they are experienced and conceptualized in everyday life, such as the borders of states or the walls bounding prisons or schools. Such organizational boundaries are often clearly marked, monitored, and managed. As a consequence, researchers often have to negotiate their access to such research settings through gatekeepers, the relevant “authorities” or other participants who may grant or deny particular forms of access or approval.
Thus case study researchers must always be sensitive to the ways in which social actors, whether onlookers or participants, themselves conceptualize and act in relation to institutional boundaries surrounding the phenomenon being studied. This may be relatively straightforward for formally organized and strongly institutionalized social entities, but setting boundaries remains a concern where boundaries are more amorphous or contentious, say in relation to a neighborhood, gang, subculture, or ethnic group. In these cases the form, extent, and consequences of demarcation, gatekeeping, and monitoring, and hence the extent and character of commonsense bounding, are more evidently problematical but are still significant, both for the conduct of the research and as a source of analytical insight.
However, researchers must also problematize actors' understandings of the bounding of any case study entity, including those apparently more solid and clearly demarcated organizations that seem to constitute naturally bounded cases to be studied. Informants may themselves seek to redefine the ways they understand and experience the boundaries of their activities, and it is likely that competing criteria by which actors bound the case are in play. Furthermore, the permeability or even precarious-ness of established boundaries may be underlined by the flows of people, symbols, and materials that cross them, highlighting the potential for the reconfiguration of such boundaries. Thus the analytical agendas and empirical investigations of researchers are likely to identify social processes that crosscut dominant institutionalized ways of bounding the case, inviting a reconceptualization of the case in terms that are not simply dependent upon commonsense readings of such boundaries.
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- Academic Disciplines
- Case Study Research in Anthropology
- Case Study Research in Business and Management
- Case Study Research in Business Ethics
- Case Study Research in Education
- Case Study Research in Feminism
- Case Study Research in Medicine
- Case Study Research in Political Science
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- Case Study With the Elderly
- Ecological Perspectives
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- Case Study Research Design
- Before-and-After Case Study Design
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- Bounding the Case
- Case Selection
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- Caseto-Case Synthesis
- Comparative Case Study
- Critical Incident Case Study
- Cross-Sectional Design
- Decision Making Under Uncertainty
- Deductive–Nomological Model of Explanation
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- Quick Start to Case Study Research
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- Coding: Axial Coding
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- Computer-Based Analysis of Qualitative Data: ATLAS.ti
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- Computer-Based Analysis of Qualitative Data: NVIVO
- Concept Mapping
- Congruence Analysis
- Constant Causal Effects Assumption
- Content Analysis
- Conversation Analysis
- Cross-Case Synthesis and Analysis
- Decision Making Under Uncertainty
- Document Analysis
- Factor Analysis
- Fiction Analysis
- High-Quality Analysis
- Inductivism
- Interactive Methodology, Feminist
- Interpreting Results
- Iterative
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- Knowledge Production
- Method of Agreement
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- Direct Observation as Evidence
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- Field Notes
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- Going Native
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- Institutional Ethnography
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- Iterative Nodes
- Language and Cultural Barriers
- Multiple Sources of Evidence
- Narrative Analysis
- Narratives
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- Personality Tests
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- Reliability
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- Researcher–Participant Relationship
- ReUse of Qualitative Data
- Sensitizing Concepts
- Subject Rights
- Subjectivism
- Theoretical Saturation
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- Use of Digital Data
- Utilization
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- Writing and Difference
- Activity Theory
- Actor-Network Theory
- ANTi-History
- Autoethnography
- Base and Superstructure
- Case Study as a Methodological Approach
- Character
- Class Analysis
- Closure
- Codifying Social Practices
- Communicative Action
- Community of Practice
- Comparing the Case Study With Other Methodologies
- Consciousness Raising
- Contradiction
- Critical Discourse Analysis
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- Dasein
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- Deconstruction
- Dialogic Inquiry
- Discourse Ethics
- Double Hermeneutic
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- Ethnographic Memoir
- Ethnography
- Ethnomethodology
- Eurocentricism
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- Layered Nature of Texts
- Life History
- Logocentrism
- Management of Impressions
- Means of Production
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- Multimethod Research Program
- Multiple Selfing
- Native Points of View
- Negotiated Order
- Network Analysis
- One-Dimensional Culture
- Ordinary Troubles
- Organizational Culture
- Paradigm Plurality in Case Study Research
- Performativity
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- Practice-Oriented Research
- Praxis
- Primitivism
- Qualitative Analysis in Case Studies
- Qualitative Comparative Analysis
- Quantitative Single-Case Research Design
- Quick Start to Case Study Research
- Self-Confrontation Method
- Self-Presentation
- Sensemaking
- Sexuality
- Sign System
- Signifier and Signified
- Simulacrum
- Social-Interaction Theory
- Storytelling
- Structuration
- Symbolic Value
- Symbolic Violence
- Thick Description
- Theoretical Traditions
- Case Study and Theoretical Science
- Chicago School
- Colonialism
- Constructivism
- Critical Realism
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- Epistemology
- Existentialism
- Families
- Formative Context
- Frame Analysis
- Historical Materialism
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- Liberal Feminism
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- North American Case Research Association
- Ontology
- Paradigm Plurality in Case Study Research
- Philosophy of Science
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- Postcolonialism
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- Reality
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- Symbolic Interactionism
- Theory Development and Contributions from Case Study Research
- Analytic Generalization
- Audience
- Authenticity
- Concatenated Theory
- Conceptual Argument
- Conceptual Model in a Qualitative Research Project
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- Conceptual Model: Causal Model
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- Explanation Building
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- Indexicality
- Instrumental Case Study
- Macrolevel Social Mechanisms
- Middle-Range Theory
- Naturalistic Generalization
- Overdetermination
- Plausibility
- Probabilistic Explanation
- Process Tracing
- Program Evaluation and Case Study
- Reporting Case Study Research
- Rhetoric in Research Reporting
- Statistical Generalization
- Substantive Theory
- Theory-Building With Cases
- Theory-Testing With Cases
- Underdetermination
- Types of Case Study Research
- ANTi-History
- Case Studies as a Teaching Tool
- Case Study in Creativity Research
- Case Study Research in Tourism
- Case Study With the Elderly
- Collective Case Study
- Configurative-Ideographic Case Study
- Critical Pedagogy and Digital Technology
- Diagnostic Case Study Research
- Explanatory Case Study
- Exploratory Case Study
- Inductivism
- Institutional Ethnography
- Instrumental Case Study
- Intercultural Performance
- Intrinsic Case Study
- Limited-Depth Case Study
- Multimedia Case Studies
- Participatory Action Research
- Participatory Case Study
- Pluralism and Case Study
- Pracademics
- Processual Case Research
- Program Evaluation and Case Study
- Program-Logic Models
- Prospective Case Study
- RealTime Cases
- Retrospective Case Study
- ReUse of Qualitative Data
- Single-Case Designs
- Spiral Case Study
- Storyselling
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