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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Hofstede, Geert; 2
Affiliations: Institute for Research on Intercultural Cooperation, Maastricht and Tilburg, The Netherlands
Correspondence: [2] Please address correspondence to: Professor Geert Hofstede, IRIC, University of Limburg, P.O. Box 616, 6200 MD Maastricht, the Netherlands, Tel: +31 43 259 544, Fax: +31 43 259 537.
Note: [1] An earlier version of this paper was presented in a session on ‘Personality and Social Structure’ organized by the Research Committee on Social Psychology at the XIIIth World Congress of Sociology, Bielefeld, Germany, July 1994.
Abstract: Two past research projects are presented as case studies how shifts to a different level of analysis produced remarkable results. In the first project a jump from the individual to the country level related psychological data to a range of other disciplines, with consequences for psychology as well. In the second a shift from the organizational to the individual level linked a sociological study to current concerns in individual psychology. These cases are used as illustrations for a discussion about levels of analysis in the social sciences. A major part of social science research is based on information collected from or about individuals. Different social science disciplines analyse such data each at their own level of aggregation: the individual, the group, the organization, the tribe, the country. This division of labor has developed into over-specialization: students of one discipline largely ignore developments in neighboring disciplines. As all social sciences study aspects of the same social reality, this parochialism defeats the purpose of the social sciences themselves. Jumping to a different level can shed an entirely new light on existing issues, even within a discipline.
Keywords: Research methods, level of analysis, general systems theory, social science general
DOI: 10.3233/HSM-1995-14304
Journal: Human Systems Management, vol. 14, no. 3, pp. 207-217, 1995
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