Abstract:
One major issue social science research is faced with concerns the methodological
schism and internecine 'warfare' that divides the field. This paper examines critically what
is referred to as combined methods research, and the claim that this is the best
methodology for addressing complex social issues. The paper discredits this claim on the
basis of the following three key points. First, it is argued that because there is necessarily
not a one to one correspondence between epistemology and methods, an appropriate
methodological approach to researching social life cannot necessarily be any one peculiar
research methodology. Second, combined methods research attenuates the crucial issue
of objectivity in social research and skews the debate towards qualitative and quantitative
research as if they are in themselves theoretical perspectives opposed to each other.
Third, the supposedly 'pragmatic philosophy' underpinning combined methods research
(which most adherents of this methodological approach misconstrue as mapping both
quantitative and qualitative research onto positivism and interpretivism) amounts to the
inherent suggestion that on the one hand the world is flat, and on the other that the
world is round. It is concluded that an appropriate methodological approach to
researching social life is one which gives pre-eminence first and foremost to the research
purpose before such other issues as the skills base of the researcher, who commissions
the study and contributions of the research to wider political discourse.