Comparer des méthodes
Examinez les méthodes sélectionnées côte à côte ; les lignes qui diffèrent sont mises en évidence.
| Content Analysis of Political Speeches× | Discourse Analysis of Foreign Policy× | |
|---|---|---|
| Domaine | International Relations | International Relations |
| Famille | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Année d'origine≠ | 2013 | 2006 |
| Auteur d'origine≠ | Content-analysis tradition; computational treatment by Justin Grimmer & Brandon Stewart | Poststructuralist IR (David Campbell, Lene Hansen) and critical discourse analysis traditions |
| Type≠ | Systematic coding and computational analysis of political text | Interpretive analysis of language, meaning, and identity in foreign policy |
| Source fondatrice≠ | Grimmer, J., & Stewart, B. M. (2013). Text as data: The promise and pitfalls of automatic content analysis methods for political texts. Political Analysis, 21(3), 267–297. DOI ↗ | Hansen, L. (2006). Security as Practice: Discourse Analysis and the Bosnian War. London: Routledge. link ↗ |
| Alias | Political Speech Content Analysis, Foreign-Policy Text Analysis, Quantitative Speech Analysis in IR, At-a-Distance Speech Coding | Foreign-Policy Discourse Analysis, Poststructuralist Discourse Analysis in IR, Securitization Discourse Analysis, Critical Discourse Analysis of Foreign Policy |
| Apparentées | 3 | 3 |
| Résumé≠ | Content analysis of political speeches turns the public words of foreign-policy actors — leaders' addresses, UN General Assembly statements, parliamentary debates, press briefings — into systematic, comparable measures. Spanning classic human-coded content analysis and modern text-as-data methods surveyed by Grimmer and Stewart (2013), it lets researchers quantify what leaders say: their threat perceptions, hostility, cooperative or conflictual orientation, issue priorities, and rhetorical positions, so that rhetoric can be tracked over time, compared across actors, and related to behavior. | Discourse analysis of foreign policy is an interpretive method that examines how language constitutes the identities, threats, and interests that make particular foreign policies appear necessary and legitimate. Rather than treating speeches as data to be counted, it asks how states represent themselves and others — friend and enemy, civilized and barbaric, self and threat — and how those representations enable and constrain policy. Associated with poststructuralist IR (David Campbell, Lene Hansen, whose Security as Practice (2006) offers a systematic framework), it shows that foreign policy and identity are mutually constituted through discourse. |
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