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Interviewing for Social Scientists
An Introductory Resource with Examples
- Hilary Arksey - University of York, UK
- Peter T Knight - Lancaster University, UK
October 1999 | 224 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
Students at postgraduate, and increasingly at undergraduate, level are required to undertake research projects and interviewing is the most frequently used research method. Interviewing for Social Scientists provides a comprehensive and authoritative introduction to interviewing. It covers all the issues that arise in interview work: theories of interviewing; design; application; and interpretation. Richly illustrated with relevant examples, each chapter includes handy statements of "advantages" and "disadvantages" of the approaches discussed.
Interviews and Research in the Social Sciences
Triangulation in Data Collection
Why Interviews?
Designing an Interview-Based Study
Feasibility and Flexibility
Approaches to Interviewing
Achieving a Successful Interview
Interviewing in Specialised Contexts
Protecting Rights and Welfare
Transcribing the Data
Meanings and Data Analysis
Writing the Report, Disseminating the Findings
This book is well structured and organised. The authors provide useful tips and examples throughout the book of how to use interviews in a research project. Without presupposing much previous knowledge from the reader, the book thus represents an ideal starting point for undergraduate students.
Faculty of Social Sciences, University Duisburg-Essen
February 12, 2016