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Paul Lazarsfeld [Vier methodologische Grundregeln der Marienthal-Studie] Wien, 1933In all this work certain norms for empirical study were maintained as a matter of course. It would have been unacceptable just to report that x percent of the people did or thought this or that about some topic. The task was to combine diverse findings into a small number of »integrating constructs.« At the same time, it was imperative to explicate as clearly as possible the procedure by which such greater depth was achieved. In a paper written in 1933 summarizing the Austrian experience, the following four rules were singled out and amply exemplified:
Paul F[elix] Lazarsfeld: Foreword to the American edition. Forty years later, in Marie Jahoda / Paul F[elix] Lazarsfeld / Hans Zeisel: Marienthal. The sociography of an unemployed community. Chicago, Ill.–New York, N.Y.: Aldine, Atherton [1971], S. vii-xvi, hier S. xiv. © Reinhard Müller -- Graz, im Oktober 2006 |
MARIENTHAL-STUDIE Otto Bauer als Anreger Erhebungsinstrumente Forschungsplan methodolog. Grundregeln inhaltliche Bedeutung Verfasserschaft Veröffentlichung "Zwei Jahre später" 50 Jahre danach zu "Einstweilen wird es Mittag" |