4.3 Article

Context and Causal Mechanisms in Political Analysis

Journal

COMPARATIVE POLITICAL STUDIES
Volume 42, Issue 9, Pages 1143-1166

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0010414009331724

Keywords

causal mechanism; context; critical juncture; process; causation

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Political scientists largely agree that causal mechanisms are crucial to understanding causation. Recent advances in qualitative and quantitative methodology suggest that causal explanations must be contextually bounded. Yet the relationship between context and mechanisms and this relationship's importance for causation are not well understood. This study defines causal mechanisms as portable concepts that explain how and why a hypothesized cause, in a given context, contributes to a particular outcome. In turn, it defines context as the relevant aspects of a setting in which an array of initial conditions leads to an outcome of a defined scope and meaning via causal mechanisms. Drawing from these definitions is the argument that credible causal explanation can occur if and only if researchers are attentive to the interaction between causal mechanisms and context, regardless of whether the methods employed are small-sample, formal, statistical, or interpretive.

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