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Replication Data for: "Political Science as a Dependent Variable: The National Science Foundation and the Shaping of a Discipline"

Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)

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Title Replication Data for: "Political Science as a Dependent Variable: The National Science Foundation and the Shaping of a Discipline"
 
Identifier https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/MDIHJI
 
Creator Moustafa, Tamir
 
Publisher Harvard Dataverse
 
Description From 1965 to 2020, the National Science Foundation constituted the single largest funding source for political science research. As such, the NSF played a central role in defining the cutting-edge of our discipline. This study draws on materials from the American Political Science Association Archive to examine the political and administrative contexts that shaped the funding priorities of the NSF Political Science Program. Additionally, the study presents a new dataset and analysis of the nearly three thousand projects funded over the 55-year life of the Program. The dataset shows that NSF funding leaned heavily toward quantitative research. Research utilizing qualitative methods received little support, and work advancing normative, critical, or interpretive approaches received virtually no support. The archival record and awards-level data make visible the material forces that shaped new knowledge production, and they underline the NSF’s instrumental role in consolidating behavioralism and marginalizing non-positivist approaches. The study sheds new light on the history of the discipline and helps to contextualize some of the distinctive features of American political science.
 
Subject Social Sciences
National Science Foundation; American Political Science Association (APSA); research support; epistemology; methodology; knowledge production
 
Date 2024-02-05
 
Contributor Moustafa, Tamir