The best of two worlds: between-method triangulation in feminist economic research.

Blin, Myriam and Siegman, Karin Astrid (2006) The best of two worlds: between-method triangulation in feminist economic research. Working Paper. SOAS, London. . [Monograph]

[img]
Preview
PDF
Download (350kB) | Preview

Abstract

Assumptions applied in Orthodox Economic methods are criticised for being an inadequate depiction of reality. This is particularly the case from the perspective of
Feminist Economics. Gender biases are reflected in the quantitative data sources and methods commonly applied for economic research. These include male biases in statistical data, a focus on outcomes rather than processes as well as the neglect of reproductive work and its interaction with market work. To overcome these problems, this paper introduces between-method triangulation, i.e. the combination of quantitative and qualitative methods of data generation and analysis, as an innovative and more realistic methodology to conduct gendered economic analysis. It draws on the authors’ recent empirical work on the Indonesian and Mauritian labour markets where between-method triangulation was employed. The approach is shown to be able to enhance empirical economic analysis by mutually validating results.
Furthermore, the approach is shown to remove gender biases in economic analysis by analysing conflicting evidence and by complementing quantitative with qualitative findings in light of feminist economics theory.

Item Type: Monograph (Working Paper)
Additional Information: Department of Economics working papers, no 146.
Research Areas: A. > Business School > Economics
Item ID: 6756
Depositing User: Dr Myriam Blin
Date Deposited: 15 Dec 2010 10:47
Last Modified: 30 Nov 2022 02:11
URI: https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/id/eprint/6756

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item

Statistics

Activity Overview
6 month trend
131Downloads
6 month trend
485Hits

Additional statistics are available via IRStats2.