ARTICLES AND PAPERS ON METHODS
- “Graduate Qualitative Methods Training in Political Science: A Disciplinary Crisis,” PS: Political Science & Politics https://doi.org/10.1017/S1049096519001719 (forthcoming in print, 2020) (with Cassandra V. Emmons).
- “Transparency in Qualitative Research,” Sage Research Methods Foundations (October 2019).
- Colin Elman, Diana Kapiszewski, Andrew Moravcsik and Sebastian Karcher, “A Guide to Annotation for Transparent Inquiry (ATI),” Version 1.0 (December 2017).
- “Qualitative Transparency: Pluralistic, Humanistic and Policy Relevant,” International History and Politics APSA Section Newsletter (Winter 2016). And response by Jeffrey Isaac, "In Praise of Transparency, But Not of DA-RT," in the same journal. For the complete journal, click here.
- “One Norm, Two Standards: Realizing Transparency in Qualitative Political Science,” The Political Methodologist 22:1 (Fall 2014).
- “Trust, but Verify: The Transparency Revolution and Qualitative International Relations,” Security Studies 23:4 (2014), pp. 663-688.
- “Transparency: The Revolution in Qualitative Political Science” PS (January 2014).
- "Did Power Politics Cause European Integration? Realist Theory Meets Qualitative Methods," Security Studies 22:4 (2013).
- "Active Citation and Qualitative Political Science," Qualitative & Multi-Method Research 10:1 (Spring 2012).
- “Charles de Gaulle and Europe: The New Revisionism,” Journal of Cold War Studies 14:1 (Winter 2012).
- "Active Citation: A Precondition for Replicable Qualitative Research," PS: Political Science and Politics 43(1) (January 2010).
PRESENTATIONS AND GUIDES ON METHODS
- "'Trust, but Verify': What the Digital and Transparency Revolutions in Social Science Mean for You" (Presentation at Institute on Qualitative and Multi-Method Research, Syracuse University, 2016).
- "'Trust, but Verify': What the Digital and Transparency Revolutions in Social Science Mean for You" (Presentation at the 2015 University of Chicago - Peking University Summer Institute on International Relations Theory and Method, August 2015).
- “Qualitative Transparency: The Coming Revolution in Political Science” (Presentation at Georgetown University, 13 January 2015)
- "Example of an Active Citation about Steven Spielberg's "Lincoln" (Methodological Memo, Princeton 2014).
- "The Revolution in Qualitative Methods: Active Citation" (A PowerPoint Presentation on Digitalized Citation) at Berkeley Initiative for Transparency in the Social Sciences (December 2013).
- Contact author for previous presentations at Midwest Political Science Association, Syracuse Institute on Qualitative and Mixed Methods, and American Political Science Association.
- "How to Create Active Citations Using LaTeX" (May 16, 2012) (with Alexander Lanoszka).
- “Methodological Memo: How to Create Active Citations Using MSWord” (March 2012).
OTHER DOCUMENTS
- For the joint statement of political science journals setting forth the content of qualitative and quantitative transparency standards, and a list of the journals that have agreed to adopt them starting on 1 January 2016, see “The (DA-RT) Data Access and Research Transparency Joint Statement,” at http://dartstatement.org/.
- "Changes to the American Political Science Association Ethics Guide on Data Access, Production Transparency, and Analytic Transparency," This document was reprinted in PS (January 2014).
- "A Guide to Active Citation" (August 2013) (Qualitative Data Repository (QDR)).
- "A Guide to Sharing Qualitative Data" (August 2013) (Qualitative Data Repository (QDR)).
- "Guidelines for Data Access and Research Transparency for Qualitative Research in Political Science," (APSA Committee Document, April 2013).
- "Expanding Public Access to the Results of Federally Funded Research" (Office of Science and Technology Policy, The White House, 22 February 2013).