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Give Methods A Chance
The Society Pages
33 episodes
9 months ago
A podcast devoted to research methods in practice. Listen to top scholars introduce a multitude of approaches to answer important questions and share stories about their experiences studying the social world. Designed for students, scholars, and society.
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Social Sciences
Education,
Science
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All content for Give Methods A Chance is the property of The Society Pages and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
A podcast devoted to research methods in practice. Listen to top scholars introduce a multitude of approaches to answer important questions and share stories about their experiences studying the social world. Designed for students, scholars, and society.
Show more...
Social Sciences
Education,
Science
Episodes (20/33)
Give Methods A Chance
Barbara Gurr and Maura Kelly on Feminist Research Methods
In this episode, Barbara Gurr, Associate Professor in the Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Program at the University of Connecticut and Maura Kelly, Associate Professor of sociology at Portland State University, join us to discuss their co-edited book Feminist Research in Practice. Barbara and Maura discuss the qualities that make a methodology feminist, examine the […]
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5 years ago
24 minutes 15 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Melissa Wilde on Conducting Comparative Historical Research
In this episode, we talk to Melissa J. Wilde, Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Pennsylvania. Melissa joins us to discuss her use of comparative historical methods in researching and writing her forthcoming book Birth of the Culture Wars.  During our conversation, Melissa reflects on questions of generalizability, the authors responsibility for how and […]
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7 years ago
43 minutes 16 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Jill Weinberg on Post-It Notes as a Visual Method
Jill Weinberg is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Tufts University and an affiliated scholar at the American Bar Foundation.  In this episode, we discuss her research on how ordinary people define justice and injustice and how social context informs their definitions. In particular, we focus on Jill’s use of post-it notes to gather responses […]
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8 years ago
30 minutes 39 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Madison Van Oort on Discourse Analysis & Studying Commercials
In this episode we welcome Madison Van Oort, Ph.D candidate at the University of Minnesota. Madison conducts research in the areas of fast-fashion and low-wage labor in the 21st century. The format of the conversation will be slightly different than past episodes, as Madison joins us to reflect on the strengths and limitations of the […]
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9 years ago
34 minutes 58 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
R. Tyson Smith on Ethnography
In this episode we are joined by R. Tyson Smith, Visiting Assistant Professor of Sociology at Haverford College. Tyson conducts research in the areas of health, gender, social psychology, criminal justice, and the military. He joins us to discuss the ethnographic approach he employs in his book, Fighting for Recognition: Identity, Masculinity, and the Act […]
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9 years ago
44 minutes 33 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Jay Borchert on Conducting Interviews in Prisons
Jay Borchert is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Sociology and a Population Studies Center Trainee at the University of Michigan, as well as a Visiting Scholar at the Center for the Study of Law & Society at UC Berkeley School of Law. We discuss research he conducted for his dissertation titled “Mass Incarceration, […]
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9 years ago
41 minutes 31 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
C.J. Pascoe on Ethnographic Research
In this episode, C.J. Pascoe, Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Oregon, joins us to discuss the ethnographic research she conducted for her award-winning book, Dude, You’re a Fag: Masculinity and Sexuality in High School. We discuss the joys of being an ethnographer, the difficulties of accessing youth culture, and how entering the […]
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9 years ago

Give Methods A Chance
Alejandro Baer on Discussion Groups
In this episode, we talk with Alejandro Baer, Associate Professor of Sociology and Director of the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at the University of Minnesota. In this study, Alejandro and his colleagues sought to understand the specific discourse around anti-semitic sentiments amongst different cultural groups in Spain. To study this difficult to measure […]
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9 years ago
33 minutes 25 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Christopher Wildeman on Quantitative Data Analysis
In this episode, we talk with Christopher Wildeman , Associate Professor of Policy Analysis and Management at Cornell University. His research and teaching interests revolve around the consequences of mass imprisonment for inequality, with emphasis on families, health, and children. He is also interested in child welfare, especially as relates to child maltreatment and the foster care […]
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9 years ago
41 minutes 54 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Clifton Evers on Mobile Video Ethnography
In this episode, we are joined by Dr. Clifton Evers. Clifton is a member of the Media, Culture, Heritage unit at Newcastle University. He joins us to discuss mobile video ethnography and his use of GoPro cameras to better capture and understand affects, emotion, and masculinity through the study of surfing. Clifton’s chapter on this […]
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9 years ago
36 minutes 57 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Stefano Bloch on Autobiography as Data and Methodological Asset
In this episode, we talk with Stefano Bloch. Stefano is an urban geographer specializing in social and spatial theory, cultural criminology, and subcultures. He is currently a Presidential Diversity Fellow in Urban Studies at Brown University. Stefano joins us to reflect on his use of personal autobiography as a source of data and methodological asset. In particular, he […]
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10 years ago
28 minutes 51 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Vinnie Roscigno on Mixed Methods
In this episode, we talk with Vincent Roscigno, sociologist at The Ohio State University, about using multiple methods to research historical inequality. Using the case of the Sioux Massacre at Wounded Knee, he ultimately answers empirical and theoretical questions about how powerful state actors justify inequality. Using archives, correspondence, and qualitative and quantitative analyses, Vinnie and his research team […]
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10 years ago
46 minutes 55 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Kathryn Henne on Multi-Sited Fieldwork
In this episode, we talk with Kathryn Henne, a Senior Research Fellow at the Regulatory Institutions Network, an interdisciplinary research center housed at the Australian National University. We discuss Kathryn’s experience conducting multi-sited fieldwork for her book Testing for Athlete Citizenship: Regulating Doping and Sex in Sport. “This approach seeks to provide a nuanced understanding of how those […]
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10 years ago
34 minutes 31 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Justin Pickett on Online Surveys
In this episode, we talk with Justin Picket of SUNY-Albany about using web-based surveys for public opinion polling and experiments. He provides guidance, tips, and tricks for using services like Amazon Mechanical Turk. “A lot of people have great ideas, and they just don’t have the resources to go out and go a longitudinal study. […]
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10 years ago
30 minutes 37 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
David Scott FitzGerald & David Cook-Martín on Comparative, Historical Research
In this episode, we are joined by co-authors David Scott FitzGerald, Associate Professor of Sociology and Co-Director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at the University of California at San Diego and David Cook-Martín, an Associate Professor of Sociology at Grinnell College and director of its Center for International Studies. We discuss the historical, […]
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10 years ago
41 minutes 38 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Douglas Hartmann on Ethnography in Light of Goffman
Alice Goffman’s ethnographic foray into a black neighborhood in inner city Philadelphia has attracted attention both inside and outside of academia. While On the Run: Fugitive Life in an American City was a critical success and Goffman was initially celebrated for her accounts of over-policing and over-criminalization, questions are now being raised about the accuracy […]
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10 years ago
36 minutes 39 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Daniel Winchester on Ethnography and Religious Conversion
In this episode, we talk with Daniel Winchester, Assistant Professor of Sociology at Purdue University. Dan joins us to discuss ethnographic research. In particular, Dan explains the value of ethnographic research for better understanding religious conversion and cultural practice. “How do you get access to people’s lives, people’s experiences, people’s feelings? Of course, you can never do […]
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10 years ago
36 minutes 54 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Elizabeth Cherry on Consumption, Identity, and Ethnography
In this episode we discuss an innovative methodological approach to understanding reflexivity and identity when doing ethnographic fieldwork. We talk with Elizabeth Cherry, Assistant Professor of Sociology and Anthropology at Manhattanville College, who collaborated with fellow ethnographers Michaela DeSoucey, Assistant Professor of Sociology at North Carolina State University and Colter Ellis, Assistant Professor of Sociology at Montana […]
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10 years ago
34 minutes 21 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Shamus Khan on Historical Data
In this episode, we are joined by Shamus Khan, Professor of Sociology at Columbia University. Professor Khan studies cultural sociology and stratification, with a strong focus on elites. He is the author of Privilege: The Making of an Adolescent Elite at St. Paul’s School and The Practice of Research. We discuss using historical data for his new research project, in which […]
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10 years ago
48 minutes 55 seconds

Give Methods A Chance
Chris Uggen on Academic Dishonesty and Public Sociology
In this special edition of Give Methods a Chance, we talk with Chris Uggen to get context and insight to a recent retraction of a political science article in Science and the resulting public discourse around the study under question. “Outright fraud, where people make up data, is likely to be exceedingly rare–in part because it is […]
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10 years ago
14 minutes 1 second

Give Methods A Chance
A podcast devoted to research methods in practice. Listen to top scholars introduce a multitude of approaches to answer important questions and share stories about their experiences studying the social world. Designed for students, scholars, and society.