<b>Qualitative Political Communication| Introduction ~ The Role of Qualitative Methods in Political Communication Research: Past, Present, and Future</b>

Authors

  • David Karpf George Washington University
  • Daniel Kreiss University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
  • Rasmus Kleis Nielsen University of Oxford, UK
  • Matthew Powers University of Washington Department of Communication

Keywords:

political communication, qualitative research methods

Abstract

This article makes the case for a new era of qualitative research to contribute to the study of political communication at a time of rapid media change. We detail the history of a tradition of mixed-methods research in the United States from the 1920s to the 1960s, and chart the rise of the currently dominant quantitative methodological consensus from the 1970s onward. We examine key works within this older tradition of mixed-methods research for examples of how scholars used field research and other qualitative methods to build theory and analyze social life. We conclude with a discussion of the ways qualitative research, including the articles in this special section, can complement quantitative work and advance the field of political communication.

Author Biographies

David Karpf, George Washington University

Assistant Professor at George Washington University

Daniel Kreiss, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Assistant Professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, University of Oxford, UK

Director of Research at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at the University of Oxford

Matthew Powers, University of Washington Department of Communication

Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication

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Published

2015-06-01

Issue

Section

Special Sections