BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
PRODID://PSA//220064
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260505T174106
VTIMEZONE:Europe/London
DTSTART:20220505T100000Z
DTEND:20220506T160000Z
UID:220064
SUMMARY:Mixed Methods Research and Causal Inference
LOCATION:University of Kent, Canterbury, CT2 7NZ
DESCRIPTION:Mixed Methods Research and Causal Inference\n\n05/05/22 11:00 AM GMT\n - 05/06/22 05:00 PM GMT\Description:\nCausal claims abound in mixed methods research. However, conceptual and methodological issues relating to causality in mixed methods research have not been systematically examined. There is no consensus about which concept of causality is employed by mixed methods research. For example, Johnson, Russo, and Schoonenboom (2017) argue for a pluralist theory of causation in mixed methods research, while Haggard and Kaufman (2016) suggest a unified (monistic) approach. Nor is it clear which research design is best for the purpose of establishing a causal claim. This workshop aims to examine and explore the concept of causality and approaches to causal claims in mixed methods research. The questions to be addressed include but are not limited to:\nWhich concept of causality best fits mixed methods research?\nWhich better captures the concept of causality in mixed methods research: causal pluralism or causal monism?\nDoes mixed methods research provide a better approach to establishing causal claims than the use of a single method?\nHow is a causal claim established in mixed methods research?\Details:\nDates\n5 -6 May 2022\nVenue\nUniversity of Kent, UK\nOrganiser\nYafeng Shan (University of Kent)\nKeynote Speakers\nSharon Crasnow (Norco College)\nR. Burke Johnson (University of South Alabama)\nFunders The British Academy\nThe Leverhulme Trust Submission\nGuidelines Please submit a 500-word abstract via Easychair (https://easychair.org/cfp/CausalityMMR2022) by 1 February 2022. All questions about submissions should be emailed to Yafeng Shan (y.shan@kent.ac.uk).\n*For more information, please click here.\n**The conference is part of the BA/Levehulme-funded project ‘The Metaphysical Foundations of Evidential Pluralism’ (2020-2022).\Location:\nUniversity of Kent\n\nCanterbury,  CT2 7NZ
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Mixed Methods Research and Causal Inference<br /><br />05/05/22 11:00 AM GMT - 05/06/22 05:00 PM GMT<br />Description:<br />Causal claims abound in mixed methods research. However, conceptual and methodological issues relating to causality in mixed methods research have not been systematically examined. There is no consensus about which concept of causality is employed by mixed methods research. For example, Johnson, Russo, and Schoonenboom (2017) argue for a pluralist theory of causation in mixed methods research, while Haggard and Kaufman (2016) suggest a unified (monistic) approach. Nor is it clear which research design is best for the purpose of establishing a causal claim. This workshop aims to examine and explore the concept of causality and approaches to causal claims in mixed methods research. The questions to be addressed include but are not limited to:<br />
Which concept of causality best fits mixed methods research?<br />
Which better captures the concept of causality in mixed methods research: causal pluralism or causal monism?<br />
Does mixed methods research provide a better approach to establishing causal claims than the use of a single method?<br />
How is a causal claim established in mixed methods research?<br />Details:<br />Dates<br />
5 -6 May 2022<br />
Venue<br />
University of Kent, UK<br />
Organiser<br />
Yafeng Shan (University of Kent)<br />
Keynote Speakers<br />
Sharon Crasnow (Norco College)<br />
R. Burke Johnson (University of South Alabama)<br />
Funders The British Academy<br />
The Leverhulme Trust Submission<br />
Guidelines Please submit a 500-word abstract via Easychair&nbsp;(<a href="https://easychair.org/cfp/CausalityMMR2022">https://easychair.org/cfp/CausalityMMR2022</a>) by 1 February 2022. All questions about submissions should be emailed to Yafeng Shan (y.shan@kent.ac.uk).<br />
*For more information, please click here.<br />
**The conference is part of the BA/Levehulme-funded project &lsquo;The Metaphysical Foundations of Evidential Pluralism&rsquo; (2020-2022).<br />Location:<br />University of Kent<br /><br />Canterbury,  CT2 7NZ
PRIORITY:3
TRANSP:TRANSPARENT
BEGIN:VALARM
TRIGGER:-PT5M
ACTION:DISPLAY
DESCRIPTION:Reminder
END:VALARM
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
