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Structuration theory
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===Methodology=== Structuration theory is relevant to research, but does not prescribe a methodology and its use in research has been problematic. Giddens intended his theory to be abstract and theoretical, informing the hermeneutic aspects of research rather than guiding practice. Giddens wrote that structuration theory "establishes the internal logical coherence of concepts within a theoretical network."<ref name="Structuration theory" />{{rp|34}} Giddens criticized many researchers who used structuration theory for empirical research, critiquing their "en bloc" use of the theory's abstract concepts in a burdensome way. "The works applying concepts from the logical framework of structuration theory that Giddens approved of were those that used them more selectively, 'in a spare and critical fashion.'"<ref name="Structuration theory" />{{rp|2}} Giddens and followers used structuration theory more as "a sensitizing device".<ref name="Turner 1986">Turner, J.H. (1986). Review essay: The theory of structuration. ''American Journal of Sociology'', ''91''(4), 969-977.</ref> Structuration theory allows researchers to focus on any structure or concept individually or in combination. In this way, structuration theory prioritizes [[ontology]] over [[epistemology]]. In his own work, Giddens focuses on production and reproduction of social practices in some context. He looked for stasis and change, [[Expectation (epistemic)|agent expectations]], relative degrees of routine, [[tradition]], behavior, and creative, skillful, and strategic thought simultaneously. He examined spatial organization, [[Unintended consequences|intended and unintended consequences]], skilled and knowledgeable agents, [[explicit knowledge|discursive]] and [[tacit knowledge]], dialectic of control, actions with motivational content, and constraints.<ref name="Structuration theory" /> Structuration theorists conduct analytical research of social relations, rather than organically discovering them, since they use structuration theory to reveal specific research questions, though that technique has been criticized as [[Cherry picking (fallacy)|cherry-picking]].<ref name="Structuration theory" /> Giddens preferred ''strategic conduct analysis'', which focuses on contextually situated actions. It employs detailed accounts of agents' knowledgeability, motivation, and the dialectic of control.<ref name="The constitution of society" />
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