Post-Disaster Housing Reconstruction in Sri Lanka

Research methodology is the procedural framework within which the research is conducted. This includes the overall approach to a problem that could be put into practice in a research process, from the theoretical underpinning to the collection and analysis of data. Choice of methodology depends on t...

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Main Authors: Nuwani Amaratunga, Richard Haigh, Bingunath Ingirige
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2015-07-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244015583072
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spelling doaj-78bcdfc159be492fac6f96bdeed83c322020-11-25T04:08:58ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402015-07-01510.1177/215824401558307210.1177_2158244015583072Post-Disaster Housing Reconstruction in Sri LankaNuwani Amaratunga0Richard Haigh1Bingunath Ingirige2University of Colombo, Sri LankaUniversity of Huddersfield, UKThe University of Salford, UKResearch methodology is the procedural framework within which the research is conducted. This includes the overall approach to a problem that could be put into practice in a research process, from the theoretical underpinning to the collection and analysis of data. Choice of methodology depends on the primary drivers: topic to be researched and the specific research questions. Hence, methodological perspectives of managing stakeholder expectations of PDHR context are composed of research philosophies, research strategy, research design, and research techniques. This research belonged to social constructivism or interpretivism within a philosophical continuum. The nature of the study was more toward subjectivism where human behavior favored voluntary stance. Ontological, methodological, epistemological, and axiological positioning carried the characteristics of idealism, ideographic, anti-positivism, and value laden, respectively. Data collection comprises two phases, preliminary and secondary. Exploratory interviews with construction experts in the United Kingdom and Sri Lanka were carried out to refine the interview questions and identify the case studies. Case study interviews during the secondary phase took place in Sri Lanka. Data collected at the preliminary stage were used to assess the attributes of power, legitimacy/proximity, and urgency of stakeholders to the project using Stakeholder Circle ™ software. Moreover, the data collected at secondary phase via case studies will be analyzed with NVivo 8. This article aims to discuss these methodological underpinnings in detail applied in a post-disaster housing reconstruction context in Sri Lanka.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244015583072
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nuwani Amaratunga
Richard Haigh
Bingunath Ingirige
spellingShingle Nuwani Amaratunga
Richard Haigh
Bingunath Ingirige
Post-Disaster Housing Reconstruction in Sri Lanka
SAGE Open
author_facet Nuwani Amaratunga
Richard Haigh
Bingunath Ingirige
author_sort Nuwani Amaratunga
title Post-Disaster Housing Reconstruction in Sri Lanka
title_short Post-Disaster Housing Reconstruction in Sri Lanka
title_full Post-Disaster Housing Reconstruction in Sri Lanka
title_fullStr Post-Disaster Housing Reconstruction in Sri Lanka
title_full_unstemmed Post-Disaster Housing Reconstruction in Sri Lanka
title_sort post-disaster housing reconstruction in sri lanka
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2015-07-01
description Research methodology is the procedural framework within which the research is conducted. This includes the overall approach to a problem that could be put into practice in a research process, from the theoretical underpinning to the collection and analysis of data. Choice of methodology depends on the primary drivers: topic to be researched and the specific research questions. Hence, methodological perspectives of managing stakeholder expectations of PDHR context are composed of research philosophies, research strategy, research design, and research techniques. This research belonged to social constructivism or interpretivism within a philosophical continuum. The nature of the study was more toward subjectivism where human behavior favored voluntary stance. Ontological, methodological, epistemological, and axiological positioning carried the characteristics of idealism, ideographic, anti-positivism, and value laden, respectively. Data collection comprises two phases, preliminary and secondary. Exploratory interviews with construction experts in the United Kingdom and Sri Lanka were carried out to refine the interview questions and identify the case studies. Case study interviews during the secondary phase took place in Sri Lanka. Data collected at the preliminary stage were used to assess the attributes of power, legitimacy/proximity, and urgency of stakeholders to the project using Stakeholder Circle ™ software. Moreover, the data collected at secondary phase via case studies will be analyzed with NVivo 8. This article aims to discuss these methodological underpinnings in detail applied in a post-disaster housing reconstruction context in Sri Lanka.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244015583072
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AT richardhaigh postdisasterhousingreconstructioninsrilanka
AT bingunathingirige postdisasterhousingreconstructioninsrilanka
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