5. Quick Recap: Observational Research Design

5. Quick Recap: Observational Research Design

Foundations of Quantitative Research in Political Science

Quick Recap: Observational Research Design

Observational Research Designs

  • When we want to study the causal effect of X on Y, but we cannot conduct an experiment, we rely on observational research designs
  • In observational research, treatment assignment is not under the control of the researcher
    • This means treatment and control groups not necessarily similar, on average, and therefore have to worry about confounding variables
  • We can use statistical methods, like linear regression, to "control" for confounding variables

Controlling for confounding variables

  • The first step in controlling for confounding variables is thinking about all possible confounders we can think of
  • We then need to measure these confounding variables so that we can control for them using statistical methods
  • However!
    • Some confounding variables are likely not measurable, available, or observable (such as a dictator’s willingness to let their country democratize)
    • We could also overlook confounds, either because we don't think of it or because we didn't know it was a confound
  • The difficulty in controlling for confounding variables makes observational research harder to sell when trying to measure a causal effect between an independent variable and a dependent variable

Dig Deeper

  • Galderisi, Peter. Understanding Political Science Statistics: Observations and Expectations in Political Analysis. Routledge, 2015.
    • Chapter 10: "Research Design and the Use of Control Variables"
Scroll to Top