Improving causal inference: strengths and limitations of natural experiments

Authors

  • Thad Dunning University of California

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22456/1982-5269.54063

Keywords:

Natural Experiment, “As If” Random, Exogenous Variation, Continuum of Plausibility, Matching.

Abstract

Social scientists increasingly exploit natural experiments in their research. This article surveys recent applications in political science, with the goal of illustrating the inferential advantages provided by this research design. When treatment assignment is less than “as if” random, studies may be something less than natural experiments, and familiar threats to valid causal inference in observational settings can arise. The author proposes a continuum of plausibility for natural experiments, defined by the extent to which treatment assignment is plausibly “as if” random, and locates several leading studies along this continuum.

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Author Biography

Thad Dunning, University of California

Professor da University of California, Berkeley

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Published

2015-04-27

How to Cite

Dunning, T. (2015). Improving causal inference: strengths and limitations of natural experiments. Revista Debates, 9(1), 153–175. https://doi.org/10.22456/1982-5269.54063

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