Search Website
Testimonial

Our university uses nVivo. I can't think why. HyperRESEARCH is much more user friendly.

Denise Goodfellow
Doctoral Student
Australia


Members Login
Members Online
None
Current Poll
What New HyperRESEARCH Feature Do You Want?
 
Home > News > In the News > HyperRESEARCH used in the analysis of Manager - Researcher relationships

The lastest issue of the IMP Journal from the Industrial Marketing and Purchasing Group (IMP Group) contains an article on "Manager - Researcher Relationships: by Geoff Eastona of the Department of Marketing, Lancaster University Management School, Lancaster University.

In the article, HyperRESEARCH is used to analyze audio recordings of interviews with some 114 interviewees. The interviews were about an hour long on average. Forty three codes were used to code over 3600 sound extracts. The article can be found in the latest issue of the journal in PDF format here.

Last Updated (Wednesday, 09 June 2010 13:31)

 
facebook Visit our company page on Facebook and become a fan! Click here.
In The News
HyperRESEARCH used to understand patterns of gangs and homicide

HyperRESEARCH is helping make the streets of Chicago a safer place by aiding researchers in understanding the relationships between housing, gangs, and homicide in Chicago, Illinois, USA.

From Vol 21, No 4 pp 435-456 (2007) issue of the "Urban Affairs Review" journal, John Hagedorn (University of Illinois, Chicago Great Cities Institute) and Brigid Rauch (University of Illinois, Chicago) present "Housing, Gangs, and Homicide - What We Can Learn from Chicago."

In their paper they write: "Recent declines in homicide in Chicago have been seen as similar to earlier declines in New York City and Los Angeles. Popular explanations that policing strategies largely explain variation in rates of violence have been skeptically greeted by criminologists. However, no plausible explanation for persisting high rates of homicide in some cities and very low rates in others has been credibly presented. One reason for this may be the narrowness of criminological investigations. Explanations for violence internationally have included human rights, housing, and economic development among other variables. This article presents data from a study on homicide in Chicago and supplements criminological thinking on homicide by adding insights from urban and globalization research."

The article can be accessed here.

Upcoming Event

17 days
left until the next event:
Researchware 20th Anniversary Year
on September 24, 2010 at 12.00am