Authors
Amber Wutich, Melissa Beresford, Julia C Bausch, Weston Eaton, Kathryn J Brasier, Clinton F Williams, Sarah Porter
Publication date
2020/7/2
Journal
Society & Natural Resources
Volume
33
Issue
7
Pages
941-948
Publisher
Routledge
Description
This study compares the efficiency of two analytic approaches—qualitative and quantitative—to social network analysis for identifying stakeholder groups. Social network data were collected from 23 water and agriculture stakeholders in Arizona, USA, and analyzed quantitatively and qualitatively. Analysis of the sample in the original order of data collection found qualitative analysis was more efficient, in that it yielded a stable result—the identification of four stakeholder groups—within 16 interviews. In contrast, the quantitative analysis did not produce a stable result after 23 interviews. Repeated analyses with randomized order and reverse order samples found qualitative approaches yielded more stable results, took about the same number of interviews to yield results, and produced slightly fewer stakeholder groups compared to quantitative approaches. Our findings suggest that, in resource-constrained projects …
Total citations
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