As with other social science methods, no single research design dominates case study research. Case studies can use at least four types of designs. First, there may be a "no theory first" type of case
study design, which is closely connected to
Kathleen M. Eisenhardt's methodological work. A second type of research design highlights the distinction between single- and multiple-case studies, following
Robert K. Yin's guidelines and extensive examples. Finally, the design rationale for a case study may be to identify "anomalies". A representative scholar of this design is
Michael Burawoy. Each of these four designs may lead to different applications, and understanding their sometimes unique
ontological and
epistemological assumptions becomes important. However, although the designs can have substantial methodological differences, the designs also can be used in explicitly acknowledged combinations with each other. While case studies can be intended to provide bounded explanations of single cases or phenomena, they are often intended to raise theoretical insights about the features of a broader population. Random selection of cases may produce unrepresentative cases, as well as uninformative cases. For example,
outlier cases (those which are extreme, deviant or atypical) can reveal more information than the potentially representative case. A case may also be chosen because of the inherent interest of the case or the circumstances surrounding it. Alternatively, it may be chosen because of researchers' in-depth local knowledge; where researchers have this local knowledge they are in a position to "soak and poke" as
Richard Fenno put it, and thereby to offer reasoned lines of explanation based on this rich knowledge of setting and circumstances. Beyond decisions about case selection and the subject and object of the study, decisions need to be made about the purpose, approach, and process of the case study.
Gary Thomas thus proposes a typology for the case study wherein purposes are first identified (evaluative or exploratory), then approaches are delineated (theory-testing, theory-building, or illustrative), then processes are decided upon, with a principal choice being between whether the study is to be single or multiple, and choices also about whether the study is to be retrospective, snapshot or diachronic, and whether it is nested, parallel or sequential. In a 2015 article, John Gerring and Jason Seawright list seven case selection strategies: • Typical cases are cases that exemplify a stable cross-case relationship. These cases are representative of the larger population of cases, and the purpose of the study is to look
within the case rather than compare it with other cases. • Diverse cases are cases that have variations on the relevant X and Y variables. Due to the range of variation on the relevant variables, these cases are representative of the full population of cases. • Extreme cases are cases that have an extreme value on the X or Y variable relative to other cases. • Deviant cases are cases that defy existing theories and common sense. They not only have extreme values on X or Y (like extreme cases) but defy existing knowledge about causal relations. • Influential cases are cases that are central to a model or theory (for example, Nazi Germany in theories of fascism and the far-right). • Most similar cases are cases that are similar on all the
independent variables, except the one of interest to the researcher. • Most different cases are cases that are different on all the independent variables, except the one of interest to the researcher. For theoretical discovery, Jason Seawright recommends using deviant cases or extreme cases that have an extreme value on the X variable. • Atheoretical (or configurative idiographic) case studies aim to describe a case very well, but not to contribute to a theory. • Interpretative (or disciplined configurative) case studies aim to use established theories to explain a specific case. • Hypothesis-generating (or heuristic) case studies aim to inductively identify new variables, hypotheses, causal mechanisms, and causal paths. • Theory testing case studies aim to assess the validity and scope conditions of existing theories. • Plausibility probes, aim to assess the plausibility of new hypotheses and theories. • Building block studies of types or subtypes, aim to identify common patterns across cases. Aaron Rapport reformulated "least-likely" and "most-likely" case selection strategies into the "countervailing conditions" case selection strategy. The countervailing conditions case selection strategy has three components: • The chosen cases fall within the scope conditions of both the primary theory being tested and the competing alternative hypotheses. • For the theories being tested, the analyst must derive clearly stated expected outcomes. • In determining how difficult a test is, the analyst should identify the strength of countervailing conditions in the chosen cases. In terms of case selection,
Gary King,
Robert Keohane, and
Sidney Verba warn against "selecting on the
dependent variable". They argue for example that researchers cannot make valid causal inferences about war outbreaks by only looking at instances where war did happen (the researcher should also look at cases where war did not happen). ==Uses==