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CampQualitativaQualitativaRecerca qualitativa
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Any d'origen1987Systematised through Krippendorff's methodology work; 4th edition 20181920
Autor originalDavid L. AltheideKlaus Krippendorff (systematic formulation); roots in early 20th-century communications researchMax Weber and Karl Mannheim
TipusQualitative analytic approachQualitative / mixed-method research techniqueMethod
Font seminalAltheide, D. L. (1987). Ethnographic content analysis. Qualitative Sociology, 10(1), 65–77. DOI ↗Krippendorff, K. (2018). Content Analysis: An Introduction to Its Methodology (4th ed.). Sage. ISBN: 978-1506395661Scott, J. (1990). A Matter of Record: Documentary Sources in Social Research. Polity Press. ISBN: 978-0745608419
Àliesfield content analysis, naturalistic content analysis, ethnographic content analysis, ECAİçerik Analizi, systematic content coding, quantitative content analysisdocumentary analysis, textual analysis, content analysis of documents, archival research
Relacionats654
ResumField-based content analysis is a qualitative analytic approach that systematically examines documents, artifacts, and texts encountered or produced within a natural field setting. Originally formulated by David Altheide as ethnographic content analysis (ECA), it blends the systematic rigor of traditional content analysis with the reflexive, iterative logic of ethnographic inquiry, allowing the researcher to interact continuously with the data and revise analytic categories as new meaning emerges from the field.Content analysis is a systematic research technique for reducing text, visual, or media material into coded categories so that patterns can be counted, compared, and interpreted. Formalised by Klaus Krippendorff in his widely cited methodology textbook (latest edition 2018), the method sits at the boundary of qualitative and quantitative inquiry: it imposes structured, replicable coding on inherently meaning-laden material.Document analysis is a systematic qualitative research method for examining written, visual, or audiovisual sources—such as policy documents, historical records, organizational records, media reports, emails, social media posts, photographs, or videos—to extract meaning, identify patterns, and understand social phenomena. Developed by Weber and Mannheim in early 20th-century sociology, the method bridges historical research, content analysis, and textual interpretation. Document analysis is used across disciplines to understand organizational change, policy evolution, media representation, historical events, and cultural meaning. Documents provide evidence of what organizations, institutions, or societies value, decide, and communicate, often revealing contradictions between policy and practice.
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ScholarGateCompara mètodes: Field-based Content Analysis · Content Analysis · Document Analysis. Recuperat el 2026-06-17 de https://scholargate.app/ca/compare