1. Introduction: why natural experiments?; Part I. Discovering Natural Experiments: 2. Standard natural experiments; 3. Regression-discontinuity designs; 4. Instrumental-variables designs; Part II. Analyzing Natural Experiments: 5. Simplicity and transparency: keys to quantitative analysis; 6. Sampling processes and standard errors; 7. The central role of qualitative evidence; Part III. Evaluating Natural Experiments: 8. How plausible is as-if random?; 9. How credible is the model?; 10. How relevant is the intervention?; Part IV. Conclusion: 11. Building strong research designs through multi-method research.
The first comprehensive guide to natural experiments, providing an ideal introduction for scholars and students.
Thad Dunning is Associate Professor of Political Science at Yale University and a research fellow at Yale's Institution for Social and Policy Studies and the Whitney and Betty MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies. He has written on a range of methodological topics, including impact evaluation, econometric corrections for selection effects and multi-method research in the social sciences, and his first book, Crude Democracy: Natural Resource Wealth and Political Regimes (Cambridge University Press, 2008), won the Best Book Award from the Comparative Democratization Section of the American Political Science Association.
'Dunning has produced a useful and remarkably accessible guide for
social scientists of all sorts. I especially like his guide to
discovering natural experiments.' J. D. Angrist, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology
'One of the most exciting developments in contemporary political
science is the use of natural experiments to estimate causal
effects. In this illuminating and highly readable book, Thad
Dunning provides an expert guide to the strengths and weaknesses of
this cutting-edge method, demonstrating how researchers can use
natural experiments as a powerful tool for causal inference while
avoiding common mistakes. I recommend this book to both beginning
and experienced researchers.' Alan S. Gerber, Charles C. and
Dorathea S. Dilley Professor of Political Science, Yale
University
'The biggest problem social scientists face is figuring out what
causes what. Does economic growth cause peace or is it the other
way round? Do people adopt the values of their friends or just
gravitate to others that think like them? Most of the time these
questions are unanswerable but every now and then there's a chink
in nature's armor. A windfall or crisis throws an economy off
course, a fire or flood forces people into new social networks.
Natural experimentalists seek out such moments to shine a light on
underlying orders. But, as Dunning shows, the natural
experimentalist's path is treacherous. In this first serious
treatment of natural experiments in social science, Dunning sets
down standards and shares techniques to help ensure real learning
from such rare moments.' Macartan Humphreys, Columbia
University
'A remarkable synthesis not just of how to do empirical work, but
how to do social science. Indispensable.' James Robinson, David
Florence Professor of Government, Harvard University
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