An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars,

12
ESRC/ NCRM Training Seminar on Cross-National Research: Research design – scientific and pragmatic rationales for choice of countries, case studies and their contextualisation An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars, Centre for Housing Policy, University of York

description

ESRC/ NCRM Training Seminar on Cross-National Research: Research design – scientific and pragmatic rationales for choice of countries, case studies and their contextualisation. An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars, Centre for Housing Policy, University of York. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars,

Page 1: An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars,

ESRC/ NCRM Training Seminar on Cross-National Research:

Research design – scientific and pragmatic rationales for choice of countries, case studies

and their contextualisation

An EU qualitative study on housing

Deborah Quilgars,

Centre for Housing Policy, University of York

Page 2: An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars,

Why consider this issue?

• Growth in cross-national research• Yet, relatively small body of literature on

cross-national research, especially qualitative methods

• Challenge greatest for qualitative work? Interpretation across historical, cultural and socio-political contexts….

• There are both scientific and pragmatic choices – need to make these explicit

Page 3: An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars,

The research study: aims

• Origins of Security and Insecurity (OSIS) -Citizens and Governance Programme (6th Fr)

• Housing as site of restructuring – interplay with jobs, household structures, finance, welfare etc

• Key aims:– Analyse factors & processes that have impacted on

households;

– Establish how households perceive patterns of security and insecurity & how affected personal strategies

Page 4: An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars,

The research study: methods overview

• Two key stages:– Quantitative analyses at macro and micro level

– Qualitative work

• Qualitative studies– Institutional studies

– 30 household interviews in each country, exploring perceptions, attitudes and extent to which housing is a resource and repository of ‘wealth’

• Today mainly focussing on qualitative work

Page 5: An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars,

The countries and researchers

• Belgium - University of Antwerp

• Finland - University of Turku

• France - ANIL, Paris

• Germany - University of Bremen

• Hungary – Metropolitan Research Institute, Budapest

• The Netherlands – OTB, Technical University of Delft

• Portugal - Centre for Studies for Social Intervention, Lisbon

• Sweden - Uppsala University

• UK - Universities of Birmingham & York

Page 6: An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars,

Choice of countries

• Scientific rationale: – selected to enable comparison across different

welfare regime types (Esping-Andersen etc)– & different housing markets (renting/ home-

owning split etc)

• Pragmatic rationale:– Cooperation - previous partnerships – Compromise - availability and interest

Page 7: An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars,

Identifying case studies I:Selecting geographical areas

• Pragmatism of one case study in each country:– impossibility of reflecting experiences across

localities (the compromise of selecting an ‘average’ area)

– location influenced by budget…. (comparing Budapest with York… a compromise)

– reality that household responses may have been different if rural areas selected…

Page 8: An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars,

Identifying case studies II: Selecting the respondents

• How important is it to select the same ‘categories’ of respondents? – Losing the reflection of individual countries

but gaining the comparison e.g. ratio of home-owners: renters

• Finding the respondents– Same or different recruitment methods?

Page 9: An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars,

Contextualisation I

• Analysis as the biggest challenge• Importance of agreed analytical framework

(and coding frame) • Locating analysis within institutional

understanding essential• Layers of analysis = layers of interpretation?...

Linguistic issues means analysis of country material not transparent….loss of cultural messages and understandings?

Page 10: An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars,

Contextualisation II

• Problem of moving from country reports to overview report… Compromise of two countries combining the material…. Could we ask for funds for everyone to be involved?

• Risk of ethnocentric focus by leading country/ countries

• Cooperation as means of accentuating the advantages & minimising the dangers

Page 11: An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars,

Cooperation is all

• Direction or over-direction?

• Past experience important?

• Knowing your fellow researchers

• Establishing open methods of communication

• Value of virtual meetings

Page 12: An EU qualitative study on housing Deborah Quilgars,

Conclusions

• Cross-national research is by its nature a challenge

• Cooperation essential and compromise inevitable

• … need to be pragmatic but scientific rationale and methods prevail overall, if work hard enough!