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from
Part I
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The Philosophy and Methodology of Experimentation in Sociology
Davide Barrera, Università degli Studi di Torino, Italy,Klarita Gërxhani, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam,Bernhard Kittel, Universität Wien, Austria,Luis Miller, Institute of Public Goods and Policies, Spanish National Research Council,Tobias Wolbring, School of Business, Economics and Society at the Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nürnberg
The first sociological experiments have been conducted in the second and third decades of the twentieth century, accompanied by a fierce debate about the possibilities and limits of the approach, which anticipated many of the critiques currently raised against the method. The chapter traces the development of experimental research in sociology from these beginning to modern perspectives. One of the reasons for the marginal position of experimentation in sociology has been the reluctance to give up full control of potentially intervening variables (called the ex post facto method) in favor of randomization. Inspirations from social psychology and, later, economics, have finally resulted in the experimental designs that are currently used in sociology.
For decades, political scientists have observed the diffusion of complex governance arrangements including public participation procedures to ameliorate the democratic deficit inherent in these often-opaque structures. This article asks how the information provided in consultation statements is used by the consulting actors. To account for the multi-step character, the article combines exchange theory with a principal-agent approach, acknowledging that several actors in a delegation chain might be interested in the provided information. We use a typical case of a multi-step procedure – participation in German grid development – to test both theories. Neither the private firms nor the regulator use information provided in their own consultations, contradicting exchange theory. But the regulator considers ecological submissions made in the firms’ consultation, as the principal-agent approach suggests. Thus, a principal-agent approach allows us to find influence of consultation statements that exchange theory cannot detect.
Recent literature on intergenerational relations – although giving different
explanations – suggests that the giving of money and services to children
reinforces the receiving of money and services by elderly people. To explore
the flow of support between the generations we present evidence about the
type and intensity of the help that elderly people receive from their adult
children and their families. By comparing five developed countries we examine
whether the amount of family help transferred to older people is shaped by a
‘crowding out’ process, in which more generous welfare systems displace
family solidarity. Taking co-residence into account the international comparison
does not support the crowding out hypothesis. We then show that
the giving of services by older people to their adult children increases the
probability that they receive help from them. This indirectly supports the
reverse hypothesis, namely that the relationship between the state and the
family may be described as a process of ‘crowding in’: generous welfare
systems which give resources to elderly people help to increase rather than
undermine family solidarity.
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