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Mixed Methods Research in Poverty and Vulnerability: Sharing Ideas and Learning Lessons


Mixed Methods Research in Poverty and Vulnerability: Sharing Ideas and Learning Lessons

Hardback by Roelen, Keetie; Camfield, Laura

Mixed Methods Research in Poverty and Vulnerability: Sharing Ideas and Learning Lessons

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ISBN:
9781137452504
Publication Date:
14 Aug 2015
Language:
English
Publisher:
Palgrave Macmillan
Pages:
281 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 27 - 29 May 2024
Mixed Methods Research in Poverty and Vulnerability: Sharing Ideas and Learning Lessons

Description

The added value of mixed methods research in poverty and vulnerability is now widely established. Nevertheless, gaps and challenges remain. This volume shares experiences from research in developed and developing country contexts on how mixed methods approaches can make research more credible, usable and responsive to complexity.

Contents

1. Introduction; Keetie Roelen and Laura Camfield PART I: POVERTY MEASUREMENT 2. Mixed methods in poverty measurement: qualitative perspectives the 'necessities of life' in the 2012 PSE-UK survey; Eldin Fahmy, Eileen Sutton and Simon Pemberton 3. Deprivation and social citizenship: the objective significance of lived experience; Daniel Edmiston 4. Bringing context to multidimensional poverty: added value and challenges of mixed methods approaches; Neil Dawson 5. Measuring the resilience of vulnerable households in Burkina Faso; Lucrezia Tincani and Nigel Poole PART II: EVALUATION RESEARCH 6. Assessing rural transformations: piloting a qualitative impact protocol in Malawi and Ethiopia; James Copestake and Fiona Remnant 7. Evaluating the impacts that impact evaluations don't evaluate; Stephen Devereux and Keetie Roelen PART III: FROM RESEARCH TO POLICY 8. An inclusive proposal for the use of mixed methods in studying poverty: an application to a Colombian municipality; Marķa Fernanda Torres and Edna Bautista Hernández 9. Challenges and Insights from mixed method impact evaluations in protracted refugee situations; Sally Burrows and Marian Read 10. Competing interpretations: human wellbeing and the use of quantitative and qualitative methods; J. Allister McGregor, Sarah Coulthard and Laura Camfield 11. Conclusion; Laura Camfield and Keetie Roelen

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