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Triangulation in organizational research : a re-presentation

journal contribution
posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00 authored by Julie Wolfram Cox, J Hassard
This paper extends the discussion of postmodern thinking in organizational theory through a re-presentation of the concept of triangulation in organizational research. Initially triangulation is defined through the contrasting lenses of positivism and post-positivism/postmodernism and analysed as a metaphor for fixing and capturing the research subject. Subsequently triangulation is ‘re-presented’ as ‘metaphorization’—in terms of process and movement between researcher-subject positions. Rethinking the lines and angles of enquiry in triangulation, the paper suggests a shift from the ‘triangulation of distance’ tradition to a more reflexive consideration of ‘researcher stance’. This movement is represented across three perspectives: the researcher as a follower of nomothetic lines; the researcher as the taker of an ideographic overview; and the researcher as the finder of a particular angle. The implications of this re-presentation are then discussed in terms of perspective, data capture, reflexivity and metatriangulation.

History

Journal

Organization

Volume

12

Issue

1

Pagination

109 - 133

Publisher

Sage

Location

London, England

ISSN

1350-5084

eISSN

1461-7323

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, SAGE

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