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On Social Research and Its Language

On Social Research and Its Language( )
Author: Lazarsfeld, Paul F.
Editor: Boudon, Raymond
Series title:Heritage of Sociology Ser.
ISBN:978-0-226-46963-8
Publication Date:Nov 1993
Publisher:University of Chicago Press
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:AUD $80.95
Book Description:

Without Paul F. Lazarsfeld the social sciences would not be what they are today. In his ground-breaking work on unemployment, voting, consumer behavior, and social influence, among other subjects, his methodological emphasis on vigorously controlled scientific language and structures transformed social research worldwide. Lazarsfeld's systematic criticism of observational, conceptual, and inferential procedures in sociology led to the the formation of universally applied...
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Book Details
Pages:342
Detailed Subjects: Social Science / Methodology
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):1.57 x 2.26 x 0.2 cm
Book Weight:0.504 Kilograms
Author Biography
Lazarsfeld, Paul F. (Author)
Paul F. Lazarsfeld was a Viennese-born American mathematician, psychologist, and sociologist who immigrated to the United States in 1933. In Vienna he had established an applied social research center, which became a model for others in the United States; the most famous product of the Vienna center is Marienthal (1933) a pioneering study of unemployment in an Austrian village. In the United States, Lazarsfeld became director of a Rockefeller Foundation-supported study of the impact of radio; through this study, communications research was established as a field of social science inquiry. In 1937 Lazarsfeld founded a research center, which became the Bureau of Applied Social Research at Columbia University; he taught at Columbia from 1940 until 1969. Lazarsfeld's research areas included mass communications, voting, latent structure analysis, mathematical models, the history of quantitative research, and the analysis of survey data. His major goal was to find intellectual convergences between the social sciences and the humanities, between concept formation and index construction, and between quantitative and qualitative research. His enthusiasm and originality had an enormous impact on colleagues and students; an annual evening lecture and reception at Columbia provided an opportunity for them to share both vivid memories and current experiences. 020



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