METHODOLOGY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES

METHODOLOGY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES

Francesca Marzo

Instructional goals

This course aims at providing students with tools necessary for understanding the methodological issues underlying economics and, more generally, social science. At the end of the course, students will be able to understand the methodological aspects related to models relating to strategic and economic behavior, some aspects related to the methods of measurement and analysis of social phenomena, and general aspects of philosophy of science applied to the social sciences. Some of the questions addressed will include: what do we mean by strategic rationality? what are the strategic element associated to cooperation? is it possible to induce cooperation? is it possible to understand social conventions as strategic coordination? what are social norms? how do we measure and engineer them?

Intended learning outcomes

(1) Knowledge and Understanding: At the end of the course, students will be able to understand methodological aspetcs linked to models of economic and strategic behavior, some aspects pertaining to methods of measurment and analysis of social phenomena, and general aspects of philosophy of science as applied to social science. (2) Applying Knowledge and Understanding: The second part of the course gives students the tools needed for applied work and, in the in-class part, helps them in the organization of such work. The course indeed does not only offer methodological knowledge, but also functions as an example of the application of such empirical research to policy design. (3) Making Judgments: At the end of the course the student will be able to make judgments about the deep characteristics of our interdependent social choices. Along with such an analysis the students will also be able to use concepts learned in composite judgemnts relative to a concrete case.  (4) Communication Skills:The assessment includes students' active participation, which will take place both offline (discussion, participation, presentation) and online (active participation to discussion forum) (5) Learning Skills: At the end of the course students will be able to come up with both explanations and normative arguments relative to social institutions.

Course Contents

After an introduction to methodological issues in economics and in social science, the first part of the course focuses on aspects linked to the theory of strategic interaction and its applications in the social science. Students will be introduced to a variety of kinds of strategic interactions (cooperation, coordination, conflict, etc.) While such types of interaction will be used to introduce and discuss the formal aspects of the theory, we also discuss the experimental literature pertaining to each type, what allows us to offer empirically motivated answers to some of the theoretical questions. In the second part of the course, we will discuss the strategic nature of some social institutions like conventions and norms, as well as issues related to measurement in such models. We will further discuss the issue of modelization in economics and in social science, on the basis of famous examples of economic models.

Reference Books

Required: - Francesco Guala, Capire le istituzioni, LUP 2019 Suggested: - Cristina Bicchieri, Norms in the Wild, Oxford University Press 2016 - Avinash Dixit e Barry Nalebuff, L’arte della strategia, TEA 2012 - Michael Luca and Max H. Bazerman, The Power of Experiments: Decision Making in a Data-Driven World - Brian Skyrms: Evolution of the Social Contract

Teaching Methods

Lectures, Discussion, Exercises, Presentations, Case studies, Flipped Classroom

Assessment Method

Written exam (70%); PW Report and presentation (30%)

Thesis assignment criteria

richiesta tempestiva, accordo sull'argomento

Week 1

Introduction. Social science and scientific method; introduction to the laboratory of quantitative research methodologies and tools. [Guala chap. 1]

Week 2

Society, institution and strategic games. Cooperation and commons [Guala chap. 1 and 2] Presentation of the Project Work and division into work groups

Week 3

Coordination games, Nash equilibrium, conventions, ultimatum game, trust game, equity models.

Week 4

Social institutions: money; correlation, evolution of institutions. [Guala chap. 3 and 4]; PW Lab: The interview. The different types and tools of administration (online and onsite)

Week 5

Conventions and social norms: from cooperation to coordination Reference groups; Preferences; Expectations and behavior; [Guala chap. 5 and 6 PW Lab: Participatory research methods: focus groups and world cafés

Week 6

Flipped classroom PW Lab: Visual methodologies and data storytelling

Week 7

MIDTERM PW Lab: Desk research and data analysis

Week 8

Collective behaviours

Week 9

Expectations, beliefs, diagnosis; Measuring social norms

Week 10

Creating and changing social norms

Week 11

Recap, Q&A

Week 12

PW Presentations