Retroduction and realism: how to theorize
In: The Nature of Capital; Routledge Studies in Social and Political Thought
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In: The Nature of Capital; Routledge Studies in Social and Political Thought
In: The British journal of social work, Band 27, Heft 5, S. 739-753
ISSN: 1468-263X
In: Journal of critical realism, Band 19, Heft 5, S. 456-465
ISSN: 1572-5138
In: Qualitative social work: research and practice, Band 17, Heft 2, S. 176-194
ISSN: 1741-3117
The critical realist position moves away from merely identifying correlations and attempts to seek out the causal mechanisms which underpin disadvantage. By drawing on an empirical study on placing disabled children for adoption, the article seeks to demonstrate the practical application of critical realist by combining its Retroductive framework with Grounded Theory methods. Bhaskar's 'Retroduction' provides an analytical framework from which the researcher examines data within three distinct levels (observable; actual; real). The Observable and Actual levels are processes which identify significant incidences and connections between variables. The 'Real', attempts to extend conceptual analysis by hypothesising about the causal mechanisms which account for a situation. This article argues that the multidimensional framework offered through Retroduction is necessary if we are to fully grasp the disadvantage disabled children experience in adoption processes. This entails examining the extent to which socially constructed notions of childhood and disability implicitly affect the practice decisions of social workers. The findings presented through these levels of analysis reveal a nuanced and multilayered understanding of adoption outcomes.
In: International journal of social research methodology: IJSRM ; theory & practice, Band 27, Heft 4, S. 417-430
ISSN: 1464-5300
In: IESE Business School Working Paper No. 840
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Working paper
In: Papachristos G, van de Kaa G. 2020. A system dynamics model of standards competition. IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management
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In: RESPOL-D-23-01399
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In: RESPOL-D-24-00903
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In: Routledge studies in critical realism
Introduction -- Inclusive education -- Empowerment, social contexts and power relations -- Critical realism and the notion of empowerment -- Methodological choices in educational research -- Karma, delta, zita and omega case studies -- Empowering and disempowering contexts -- Post-conflict retroductions : teacher empowerments.
In: Critical review: an interdisciplinary journal of politics and society, Band 17, Heft 1-2, S. 133-154
ISSN: 0891-3811
As microeconomic calculus & macroeconomic estimation superseded earlier approaches to political economy, broad questions about how things are (ontology), how things might be known (epistemology), & how science should proceed (methodology) were neglected. As a corrective, Critical Realism (CR) has been proposed as an alternative to the orthodox deductive-nomological (ODN) tradition: i.e., to mathematical deduction & statistical induction. In their place, retroduction -- the use of analogy, metaphor, intuition, & ordinary language -- is supposed to illuminate root causes by identifying the deep mechanisms that govern events. CR offers guidelines for social science that are of a most general kind: from initial "premises," retroduction proceeds to hypotheses about deep structures & mechanisms. The initial premises are determined by a desire to understand events that surprise us. However, nothing is thereby excluded, including ODN. & since historical processes are revealed neither by assumption nor by the net effects of whatever initial conditions hold, it might be apposite to drop the search for (deep) socio-economic laws & instead use whatever evidence is at hand to see whether, & the extent to which, ideal types apply to any given historical sequence. References. Adapted from the source document.
In: Routledge library editions. Marxism Volume 19
1. Marx's critique of political economy as a problem-posing framework -- 2. Conceptualization and critique in Marx and today -- 3. The meaning and significance of Marx's critique of the method of political economy -- 4. Making analytical and practical sense of Marx's critical/dialectical procedure -- 5. Ontological underpinnings of the critical/dialectical procedure -- 6. Retroduction and empiricism in Marx's practice and theory of understanding -- 7. Labour as the objective basis of materialist dialectics.
Preface -- Contents -- List of figures -- List of tables -- List of boxes -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- Chapter 2 Research design -- Chapter 3 Banking and finance -- Chapter 4 Environmental issues and sustainability -- Chapter 5 Banking and sustainability: an analytical framework -- Chapter 6 Sustainability and financing risks -- Chapter 7 Sustainability and product development -- Chapter 8 Internal sustainability care -- Chapter 9 Communication and organization on sustainability -- Chapter 10 Retroduction -- Chapter 11 Conclusions -- Appendix I Geographic scope of the book
In: Ontological explorations
Introduction / Petter Næss and Leigh Price -- Ideology and economics / Tony Lawson -- The economics of research : the contribution of critical realism / David Tyfield -- Inaccurate and biased : cost-benefit analyses of transport infrastructure projects / Petter Næss -- Arguments for and against economic growth / Jin Xue -- The symptomatology of crises : some critical realist reflections / Bob Jessop -- Using retroduction to address wicked problems / Leigh Price -- Housing standards, environmental sustainability and social welfare / Petter Næss and Jin Xue -- Systemic issues within the crisis of global capitalism : the case of land and food / Robert Biel -- The illusion of green capitalism / Petter Næss -- China at the crossroad : ecological modernization or ecosocialism? / Jin Xue -- Making the critique of capitalism fit for the present crisis / Arne Johan Vetlesen
This research aims to investigate the financial and immigration mismanagement in Italy in the context of the recent refugee crisis. The paper contributes to previous accounting studies on corruption and immigration by unveiling the role of accounting as a technology of ignorance serving multiple and contradictory objectives of a fragmented State. We observed that ignorance partially produced through accounting relieved the Italian state of the social, political and economic burden of the refugee crisis. As opposed to a common understanding of corruption as use of public office for private gains, the consequent lack of control and corruption deriving from this ignorance ultimately served 'public' gains. The paper proposes retroduction as an approach for conducting critical accounting studies and invites future accounting researchers to expose States' control over territory, resources, and population through a critical investigation of the strategic and political use of ignorance.
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