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The yearbook Comparative Social Research aims at furthering the
international orientation in the social sciences. Each volume is
concentrated on a specific topic, mostly of substantive, but also
of methodological character. As a rule, the articles present two or
more cases for comparison, be they nations, regions, organizations,
or social units at different points of time. The volumes embrace a
broad set topics, such as comparative studies of universities as
institutions for production and diffusion of knowledge; family
policies; regional cultures; and institutional aspects of work and
wage formation. Comparative Social Research seeks well-written
articles that place the current or historical data in context,
critically review the literature of comparative studies, or provide
new theoretical or methodological insights. The series recognizes
that comparative research is theoretically and methodologically
interdisciplinary, and encourages and supports there trends. All
papers will be subject to double-blind peer review.
This analysis of regional cultures is the 17th part in a series on
social research. Topics covered include: the emergence of Wales and
Saxony as modern regions in Europe; state support and literary
regionalism in Norway and the US; and regional industrialization
and political mobilization.
Focusing upon the area of social methodology, this volume examines
diverse approaches toward sociological research. These include
case-orientated research versus variable orientated research, a
multi-methodological approach and comparing historical sequences.
The book should serve as a source of reference for research into
approaches to social methodology.
Despite the growing awareness of globalization, the main bulk of
empirical work in the social sciences remains within the frames of
what Stein Rokkan termed "national empiricism". The yearbook
Comparative Social Research aims at furthering the international
orientation in the social sciences. Each volume is concentrated on
a specific topic, mostly of substantive, but also of methodological
character. As a rule, the articles present two or more cases for
comparison, be they nations, regions, organizations, or social
units at different points of time. The volumes embrace a broad set
topics, such as comparative studies of universities as institutions
for production and diffusion of knowledge; family policies;
regional cultures; and institutional aspects of work and wage
formation. Comparative Social Research seeks well-written articles
that place the current or historical data in context, critically
review the literature of comparative studies, or provide new
theoretical or methodological insights. The series recognizes that
comparative research is theoretically and methodologically
interdisciplinary, and encourages and supports there trends. All
papers will be subject to double-blind peer review.
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