What Methods Do Social Scientists Use to Study Disasters? An Analysis of the Social Science Extreme Events Research Network

2020 ◽  
Vol 64 (8) ◽  
pp. 1066-1094
Author(s):  
Lori Peek ◽  
Heather Champeau ◽  
Jessica Austin ◽  
Mason Mathews ◽  
Haorui Wu

Methods matter. They influence what we know and who we come to know about in the context of hazards and disasters. Research methods are of profound importance to the scholarly advancement of the field and, accordingly, a growing number of publications focus on research methods and ethical practices associated with the study of extreme events. Still, notable gaps exist. The National Science Foundation-funded Social Science Extreme Events Research (SSEER) network was formed, in part, to respond to the need for more specific information about the status and expertise of the social science hazards and disaster research workforce. Drawing on data from 1,013 SSEER members located across five United Nations (UN) regions, this article reports on the demographic characteristics of SSEER researchers; provides a novel inventory of methods used by social science hazards and disaster researchers; and explores how methodological approaches vary by specific researcher attributes including discipline, professional status, researcher type based on level of involvement in the field, hazard/disaster type studied, and disaster phase studied. The results have implications for training, mentoring, and workforce development initiatives geared toward ensuring that a diverse next generation of social science researchers is prepared to study the root causes and social consequences of disasters.

2022 ◽  
pp. 32-52
Author(s):  
Maria da Conceição da Costa Tavares ◽  
Alcina Portugal Dias

Accounting as a social science considers an objective and subjective reality that must be seen and understood under the institutional context where it is developed. Thus, this chapter discusses the roles and effects of the paradigms in accounting research, in general, and social accounting research, in particular, aiming to know and understand the research lines that better define a theoretical scope of analysis for the social accounting practice. This research tries to better fit the answers to some questions about social accounting. The results argue for the importance of keeping a theoretical paradigm alive in order to foster multidimensional openness and true scholarship in accounting research and application. A multi-disciplinary appreciation with different perspectives will enrich the research in social accounting.


2013 ◽  
Vol 44 (3/4) ◽  
pp. 631
Author(s):  
John Prebble ◽  
Julia Caldwell ◽  
Amelia Keene

The Social Science Research Network is a depository for academic scholarship. SSRN allows academic papers and abstracts to be accessible worldwide. Most papers may be downloaded from the SSRN database free of charge, but some links are to commercial sites. Posting papers to SSRN and subscribing to its site are not inherently complicated. However, it is possible for academic departments, particularly law schools, to use SSRN more efficiently and more flexibly than SSRN's architects envisaged. For instance, one can establish a faculty working paper series with archived issues that are forever easily accessible, a much cheaper manner of establishing a working paper series than traditional ways, and a more permanent format than envisaged by standard SSRN systems. This article explains how SSRN works and how it can be used more effectively.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Agnieszka Hamerlińska‑Latecka

The present text is an attempt to connect the speech therapy with the research methodology of the social science. In it an outline of the research and described strategies of quality inspections were presented and quantitative which can be taken in this area. The author made characteristics of chosen research methods as well as is emphasizing the weight of ethics of examinations in the speech therapy.


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