ABSTRACT
This paper examines the role of causal inference in the on-going methodological debate in political science research. Here, we critically engage the extant literature, take stock of the major debates, articulate key gaps and its limitations. Then, we leverage published journal articles in Web of Science (WoS) database collections and analyze them according to their publication years, topics, research areas, and countries/regions that they focused on. Finally, we did the same review at the country-level to look for nuanced patterns. We found that there is an influx of causal inference articles that are primarily election-related and concerns about the government and law. A good number of these studies focused in developed countries, while only limited interest in developing countries. Ultimately, we demonstrate that while the trend of much political science research has been the pursuit of causal inference, many regional and national-level studies of this kind remain scant and marginal. This is particularly revealing in the Philippine context which suggests potentially minimal exposure and lesser interaction and dissemination of the core ideas of establishing cause-and-effect in social science. This bears implications to the state and trajectory of empirical political works in Philippine political science.
Acknowledgments
This manuscript benefits a great deal from the brilliant comments and insights of Dr. Poe Yu-ze Wan and Prof. Brian C.H. Fong during the Southern Taiwan Social Sciences Research School Conference Program last July 21-22, 2023 at the National Sun Yat-sen University. Part of this paper was developed during the completion of my PhD studies. I would like to especially thank the members of my committee on Political Methodology: Dr. Frank C.S. Liu, Dr. Titus C. Chen, Dr. Rou-len Chen and Dr. Jinh-yeok Jang for their critical and constructive feedback. I am also grateful to my classmates Dr. Ahmet Tulga, Dr. Daniel Davies, Tonny Dian Effendi (PhD Cand) and Ariel Blenkitni (PhD Cand) for the bright conversations we had over this topic. Lastly, I would like to thank the editor and reviewers of the Asian Journal of Political Science for their helpful feedback. All errors however are my own.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Notes
1 It should be stated that the works of Fiva and Smith (Citation2018) and López-Moctezuma et al. (Citation2022) have appeared in the American Political Science Review—the world's leading journal in political science.
2 Some of them are wrongly categorized or included as causal since this type of research is heavily reliant on search terms. By extension, there might be some related studies that were excluded which may be used in further research.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Ronald A. Pernia
Ronald A. Pernia is an Assistant Professor in the Political Science Program of the College of Social Sciences of the University of the Philippines Cebu. His research interest includes public opinion and comparative political behavior, autocratization and democratization; political trust and authoritarian values; regression analyses and multilevel modelling educational politics and educational research.