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Análise de Conteúdo Qualitativa Interpretativa×Análise Documental Interpretativa×
ÁreaQualitativoQualitativo
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Ano de origem2005 (interpretive strand formalised); qualitative content analysis roots in the 1980s–1990s2000s (building on hermeneutic traditions from the 20th century)
Autor originalHsiu-Fang Hsieh & Sarah E. Shannon (conventional/interpretive strand); Phillip Mayring (qualitative content analysis generally)Glenn Bowen (systematic method); Lindsay Prior (social use of documents)
TipoQualitative analytic approachQualitative document-based research method
Fonte seminalHsieh, H.-F., & Shannon, S. E. (2005). Three approaches to qualitative content analysis. Qualitative Health Research, 15(9), 1277–1288. DOI ↗Bowen, G. A. (2009). Document analysis as a qualitative research method. Qualitative Research Journal, 9(2), 27–40. DOI ↗
Outros nomesconventional content analysis, inductive qualitative content analysis, interpretive QCA, IQCAinterpretive documentary analysis, hermeneutic document analysis, qualitative document analysis, interpretive textual analysis
Relacionados56
ResumoInterpretive qualitative content analysis (also called conventional content analysis) is a qualitative approach to systematically analysing text in which coding categories emerge directly from the data rather than from a pre-defined coding scheme. The researcher immerses themselves in the material, derives codes inductively through close reading, groups those codes into interpretive categories, and constructs a conceptual account of the content's meaning. It is especially suited to domains where existing theory is sparse and the aim is to understand how participants describe or make sense of a phenomenon.Interpretive document analysis is a qualitative method that systematically examines written, visual, or digital documents to construct meaning from them within their social, historical, and institutional contexts. Rather than simply counting content categories, it reads documents as social artefacts — asking not only what a document says, but what it does, who produced it, for what purpose, and what assumptions it encodes. The approach draws on hermeneutic and interpretive traditions to move between individual passages and the broader context in which they were created.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Interpretive qualitative content analysis · Interpretive document analysis. Recuperado em 2026-06-15 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare