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LU0085

The Context and Process of Research I: Theories and Methods

This is a course in social theory, where on the one hand principal social theories are presented and discussed, and on the other, students are taught how to use and apply the theories on an empirical material, i.e. to theorize. The course also focuses on the interconnection between theory and methods. During the course the students will also start to work on their individual research problems. They are expected to formulate a research problem and learn how to select the theories and concepts to theorize about both the problem and the potential empirical material.

The course provides the students with a basic understanding of theoretical and methodological contexts and of the perspectives different theories, concepts and methods contribute to data collection and analysis. The main focus of the course is on qualitative methods, but the theoretical context of quantitative methods are also presented. The course presents the theoretical grounds of social analysis, the interaction between structure and agency, hermeneutics, phenomenology, gender analysis, Marxist social theory and social justice.

The course consists of lectures as well as individual and group exercises, discussed during seminars.

Course evaluation

The course evaluation is now closed

LU0085-10395 - Course evaluation report

Once the evaluation is closed, the course coordinator and student representative have 1 month to draft their comments. The comments will be published in the evaluation report.

Additional course evaluations for LU0085

Academic year 2024/2025

The Context and Process of Research I: Theories and Methods (LU0085-10167)

2024-09-02 - 2024-10-01

Academic year 2022/2023

The Context and Process of Research I: Theories and Methods (LU0085-10103)

2022-08-29 - 2022-09-28

Academic year 2021/2022

The Context and Process of Research I: Theories and Methods (LU0085-10254)

2021-08-30 - 2021-09-29

Academic year 2020/2021

The Context and Process of Research I: Theories and Methods (LU0085-10228)

2020-08-31 - 2020-09-29

Academic year 2019/2020

The Context and Process of Research I: Theories and Methods (LU0085-10073)

2019-09-02 - 2019-10-01

Academic year 2018/2019

The Context and Process of Research I: Theories and Methods (LU0085-10157)

2018-09-03 - 2018-10-07

Academic year 2017/2018

The Context and Process of Research I: Theories and Methods (LU0085-10049)

2017-08-28 - 2017-10-01

Syllabus and other information

Litterature list

The Process of Research I: Theories and Methods**:
Literature**

Fall 2023

Örjan Bartholdson
orjan.bartholdson@slu.se

**Cristian Alarcón Ferrari
**Cristian-Alarcon.Ferrari@slu.se

Literature

Literature

You will only have to purchase the books marked with a *, that is, the first book mentioned on the list below.

Please note that some papers might be added to the list, and some may be changed or omitted before the course starts.

Books:

*Inglis, David. 2012. An Invitation to Social Theory. Cambridge. Polity Press.

Excerpts of Books:

Bourdieu, Pierre; Wacquant, Lois. 1992. An Invitation to Reflexive Sociology. Pages: 94-135, 167-173. Cambridge. University of Chicago.

Bratton, John, Denham, David. 2014. Emile Durkheim: The rules of sociological method and on Suicide. The division of labour in society. Capitalism and classical social theory. University of Toronto Press. Pages 183-204

Eriksen, Thomas Hylland. Small Places, Large Issues. An Introduction to Social and Cultural Anthropology. Pluto Press. Pages 30

Geertz, Clifford. 1973. Deep Play: Notes on the Balinese Cockfight. The Interpretation of Culture. New York. Basic Books. Pages 412-454.

Giddens, Anthony. 1986. Agency, Structure. Central Problems in Social Theory.Action, Structure and Contradiction in Social Analysis. Hong Kong. MacMillan. Pages 49-73.

Gramsci, A. 2000. Hegemony, Relations of Force, Historical Bloc. In: The Gramsci Reader. Selected Writings 1916-1935, edited by Forgacs, David. Pages: 189-221

Hacking, Ian. 2000. Why Ask What? The Social Construction of What? Cambridge. Harvard University Press. Pages 1-35.

Jackson, Michael. Introduction. In* Things as They Are. New directions in phenomenological anthropology*. Indiana University Press.

Jackson, Michael. 2013. Chapter 3: Knowledge of the body. Lifeworlds. Essays in existential anthropology. Chicago. The University of Chicago Press.

Kaidesoja, T. J. (2019). Building middle-range theories from case studies. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A.

Laclau, E., andMouffe, C. 1985. Beyond the Positivity of the Social: Antagonisms and Hegemony. In: Hegemony and socialist strategy: Towards a radical democratic politics. Verso. Pages 93-148

Marx, Karl. 1973. Grundrisse. Pages 100-108 (the method of political economy)

Marx, Karl. 1990. Capital, Volume I. Pages 873-940 (Part 8, So-called primitive accumulation)

Meiksins Wood, Ellen. 2012.The Ellen Meiksins Wood Reader, edited by Larry Patriquin. Brill. Pages 18-61

Ong, Aihwa. 1983. “Global industries and Malay peasants in peninsular Malaysia.” In Women, men, and the international division of labor* *(ed. June Nash and Maria Fernandez-Kelley). 426–39. Albany: SUNY Press.

Rehmann, J. (2013). Theories of ideology: The powers of alienation and subjection. Brill. Pages 21-60

Robert K. Merton. 1949. Social Theory and Social Structure*. *The FreePress. Pages 39-53

Parsons, Keith. 2014. It started with Copernicus. Vital Questions about Science. New York. Prometheus Books.

Sharrock, Wes & Button, Graham 1991: The social actor: social action in real time. In: Button, Graham (ed.): Ethnomethodology and the human sciences. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (p 137 - 171)

Scheper-Hughes, Nancy. 1992. Death Without Weeping. The violence of everyday life in Brazil. University of California Press. Part of chapter 1, chapter 3. Pages 31-36, 49-64, 98-127

Scott, James. 1985. Hegemony and Consciousness (Chapter 8) in The Weapons of the Weak. Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance.

Swartz, David L. Chapter 2 and Chapter 3. Symbolic Power, Politics and Intellectuals. The political sociology of Pierre Bourdieu. Chicago. The Chicago University Press. Pages 30-78

Tilly, Charles. 1991. Domination, resistance, compliance...discourse. Sociological Forum. Vol. 6 (3): 593-602

Turner, Jonathan H.. 2012. Theoretical Principles of Sociology, Volume 3, Mesodynamics. Springer. Pages 1-28 (Chapter 1)

Weber, Max. 1978. Economy and society: An outline of interpretive sociology. Vol. 1. University of California press. Pages 3-62 (Chapter 1), 302-307 (chapter 4)

Wolf, Eric. 1982. Modes of Production. The Fur Trade. In Europe and the People Without History. Berkely. University of California Press. Pages 73-100, 158-194

Articles:

Bartholdson, Örjan, Abdallah, Jummane, Marquardt, Kristina, Salomonsson, Lennart. 2019. Is REDD+ More of an Institutional Affair than a Market Process? The Concealed Social and Cultural Consequences of an Ongoing REDD+ Project in Kolo Hills, Tanzania. In Forests. Vol. 10(618): 1-18
https://doi.org/10.3390/f10080618

Collier, S. J. (2020). Global anthropology and the art of the middle range. HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory10(3), 1052-1054.

Ekers, M., Loftus, A., & Mann, G. 2009. Gramsci lives!. Geoforum, 40(3), 287-291.

Esping-Andersen, (1989) “The three political economies of the welfare state”. Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology, 26(1), 1989

Fraser, N (1995) Recognition or redistribution? A critical reading of Iris Young’s justice and the policitics of difference. The Journal of Political Philosophy 3 (2) pp 166-180

Graeber, David. 2006. Beyond Power/Knowledge- an exploration of the relation of power, ignorance and stupidity. The Malinowski Memorial Lecture, 2006. HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory. Pages 105 – 128

Imenda, S. (2014). Is there a conceptual difference between theoretical and conceptual frameworks?. Journal of social sciences38(2), 185-195.

Hughes, S., Davis, T. E., & Imenda, S. N. (2019). Demystifying theoretical and conceptual frameworks: A guide for students and advisors of educational research. J Soc Sci58(1-3), 24-35.

Martínez, Maria, Laura. 2009. Ian Hacking’s Proposal for the Distinction between Natural and Social Sciences. In Philosophy of the Social Sciences. Vol. 39: 212-234

Meyfroidt, Patrick, R. Roy Chowdhury, Ariane de Bremond, Erle C. Ellis, K-H. Erb, Tatiana Filatova, R. D. Garrett et al. "Middle-range theories of land system change." Global environmental change 53 (2018): 52-67.

Swedberg, Rickard. 2012. Theorizing in sociology and social science: turning to the context of discovery. In Theory and Society. Vol. 41: 1-40.

Course facts

The course is offered as an independent course: No The course is offered as a programme course: Rural Development and Natural Resource Management - Master's Programme EnvEuro - European Master in Environmental Science Environmental Communication and Management - Master's Programme Agriculture Programme - Rural Development Tuition fee: Tuition fee only for non-EU/EEA/Switzerland citizens: 13750 SEK Cycle: Master’s level (A1N)
Subject: Environmental Science Rural Development Rural Development Environmental science
Course code: LU0085 Application code: SLU-10395 Location: Uppsala Distance course: No Language: English Responsible department: Department of Urban and Rural Development Pace: 100%