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| Content Analysis of Political Speeches× | Content Analysis of Treaties× | |
|---|---|---|
| 분야 | International Relations | International Relations |
| 계열 | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| 기원 연도≠ | 2013 | 2000 |
| 창시자≠ | Content-analysis tradition; computational treatment by Justin Grimmer & Brandon Stewart | Klaus Krippendorff (content analysis methodology); legalization literature (Abbott et al.) |
| 유형≠ | Systematic coding and computational analysis of political text | Systematic coding of the text and design features of international agreements |
| 원전≠ | 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 ↗ | Hayes, A. F., & Krippendorff, K. (2007). Answering the call for a standard reliability measure for coding data. Communication Methods and Measures, 1(1), 77–89. DOI ↗ |
| 별칭 | Political Speech Content Analysis, Foreign-Policy Text Analysis, Quantitative Speech Analysis in IR, At-a-Distance Speech Coding | Treaty Text Analysis, International Agreement Coding, Treaty Design Content Analysis, Legalization Content Analysis |
| 관련 | 3 | 3 |
| 요약≠ | 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. | Content analysis of treaties is the systematic, rule-governed coding of the text and design features of international agreements — their obligations, precision, delegation, enforcement, flexibility, and substantive provisions — to study how treaties are written and what explains variation in their design. It applies the established content-analysis methodology codified by Krippendorff to the specialized vocabulary of international law and institutions, often organized around frameworks such as the legalization concept of Abbott and colleagues (2000). |
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