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Selecting Research Methods Vol. - II: Methods to Sample Recruit and Assign Cases

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Los Angeles Sage Publications 2008Description: 435pISBN:
  • 9781847871800
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 300.72 SEL
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Holdings
Item type Current library Item location Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Reference Book Reference Book NIMA Knowledge Centre 7th Floor Silence Zone Reference 300.72 SEL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan M0025641
Total holds: 0

VOLUME 2: METHODS TO SAMPLE, RECRUIT AND ASSIGN CASES Recruitment for a Panel Study of Australian Retirees The Difficulty of Identifying Rare Samples to Study: The case of schools divided into schools within schools In Search of Homo Economicus: Behavioral experiments in 15 small-scale societies Population Estimation without Censuses or Surveys: A discussion of mark-recapture methods A Different Kind of Snowball: Identifying Key Policymakers Sampling and Estimation in Hidden Populations Using Respondent-Driven Sampling Sample Size: More than calculations Sample Size Planning for the Standardized Mean Difference: Accuracy in parameter estimation via narrow confidence intervals Sufficient Sample Sizes for Multilevel Modeling Two-Step Hierarchical Estimation: Beyond regression analysis Nested Analysis as a Mixed-Method Strategy for Comparative Research When Can History Be Our Guide? The pitfalls of counterfactual inference The Possibility Principle: Choosing negative cases in comparative research Use of Extreme Groups Approach: A critical reexamination and new recommendations The Intervention Selection Bias: An underrecognized confound in intervention research Getting the Most from Archived Qualitative Data: Epistemological, practical, and professional obstacles Whose Data are they Anyway? Practical, legal and ethical issues in archiving qualitative research data Recording Technologies and the Interview in Sociology, 1920-2000 Toward An Open-Source Methodology: What we can learn from the blogosphere Does Mode Matter for Modeling Political Choice? Evidence from the 2005 british election study Reaching Migrants in Survey Research: The use of global position system to reduce coverage bias in China

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