• Skip to Main Navigation
  • Skip to Content
  • Skip to Footer
  • About Mortara
    • Our Mission
    • Our History
      • Annual Reports
    • Our Building
      • Conference Room Reservations
      • Faculty Book Exhibition
    • Mortara News
  • Research Programs
    • Mortara Research Seminar
    • Political Economy Seminar
    • Mortara ASAP Grants
    • Faculty Book Launches
    • Faculty Book Workshops
  • Lepgold Book Prize
    • Lepgold Book Prize
    • Celebrating the Twenty-Third Annual Lepgold Book Prize
  • MURF Program
    • The Undergraduate Research Fellowship
    • Timeline
    • Application Process
    • MURF Alumni
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Initiatives and Projects
    • Global Political Economy Project
    • Earth Commons X Mortara Center
    • Supported by Mortara
      • Good Authority
      • Lab for Globalization and Shared Prosperity
      • ACUNS
    • In the News Event Series
    • Anniversary: 20 years!
    • Custom Executive Education
  • Our People
    • Faculty at the Mortara Center
    • Staff
    • Resident Fellows
      • Visiting Researchers
      • Mortara Undergraduate Research Fellows (MURFs)
      • GPEP Fellows
      • GPEP Alumni
      • Other Resident Fellows
    • Non-Resident Fellows
  • News
  • Events
Georgetown University
Walsh School of Foreign Service
  • News
  • Events
  • About Mortara
    • Our Mission
    • Our History
      • Annual Reports
    • Our Building
      • Conference Room Reservations
      • Faculty Book Exhibition
    • Mortara News
  • Research Programs
    • Mortara Research Seminar
    • Political Economy Seminar
    • Mortara ASAP Grants
    • Faculty Book Launches
    • Faculty Book Workshops
  • Lepgold Book Prize
    • Lepgold Book Prize
    • Celebrating the Twenty-Third Annual Lepgold Book Prize
  • MURF Program
    • The Undergraduate Research Fellowship
    • Timeline
    • Application Process
    • MURF Alumni
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Initiatives and Projects
    • Global Political Economy Project
    • Earth Commons X Mortara Center
    • Supported by Mortara
      • Good Authority
      • Lab for Globalization and Shared Prosperity
      • ACUNS
    • In the News Event Series
    • Anniversary: 20 years!
    • Custom Executive Education
  • Our People
    • Faculty at the Mortara Center
    • Staff
    • Resident Fellows
      • Visiting Researchers
      • Mortara Undergraduate Research Fellows (MURFs)
      • GPEP Fellows
      • GPEP Alumni
      • Other Resident Fellows
    • Non-Resident Fellows
Initiatives and Projects
Navigate To…
  • Global Political Economy Project
    • Our Goals
    • Research Themes
    • GPEP Fellowships
      • Former Fellows
    • The Industrial Policy and Geopolitical Turn in Markets
    • Digital Economy & Security Collaborative (DESC)
      • DESC Workshop and Public Policy Panel
      • DESC Speaker Series
      • GPEP-Digital
    • GPEP-Race
    • GPEP-Qualitative Methods
  • Earth Commons X Mortara
  • Supported By Mortara
    • Good Authority
    • Lab for Globalization and Shared Prosperity
    • ACUNS
  • In the News Event Series
  • Anniversary: 20 years!
  • Custom Executive Education

GPEP-Qualitative Methods

blurry people walking through an intersection during the day in a big city

The transformational nature of today’s politics demand multiple methods, including qualitative methods, to better understand the complex interactions of social, political, and economic forces. Our goals for GPEP-Q are twofold: first, to give graduate students access to senior scholars with experience and expertise using the tools of qualitative inquiry, and second, to establish a network of scholars advancing qualitative research in the field of political economy. We aim to help students approach and present qualitative research in a rigorous, generalizable, and parsimonious manner for triangulating evidence, studying both ongoing and rare events, illustrating complex causal processes, and identifying new research questions.

In April and May 2021, the Global Political Economy Project (GPEP) hosted a graduate student workshop on qualitative research in political economy. Over three weeks, our invited doctoral students participated in master classes, break-out sessions, and individual one-on-one meetings with leading scholars of comparative and international political economy, including Layna Mosley (Princeton University), James Ashley Morrison (LSE), and Jacqueline Best (University of Ottawa). Our last meeting was open to the broader GPEP community, focusing on how to publish qualitative work successfully, whether based on interviews, focus groups, ethnography, archival and historical approaches, or process tracing. This experience should help upgrade the next generation’s scholarship to better understand the workings of the global political economy.

Watch the recording of the GPEP Qualitative Methods Publishing Roundtable here.

 

Faculty Mentors

  • Jacqueline Best

    Faculty Mentor

  • Layna Mosley

    Faculty Mentor

  • James Ashley Morrison

    Faculty Mentor

Participants

  • Aditi Sahasrabuddhe

    GPEP Fellow (2020-2021)

  • Nicholas J. Bell

    GPEP Fellow (2020-2021)

  • Siyao Li

    GPEP Fellow (2020-2021)

  • Adam Parker

    Columbia University

  • Alisson Rowland

    University of California, Irvine

  • Claire Ma

    University of Pennsylvania

  • David Talbot

    University of Cambridge

  • Gloria Xiong

    GPEP Fellow (2023–2024)

  • Kennedy Mbeva

    University of Melbourne

  • Oren Samet

    University of California, Berkeley

  • Robert Shaver

    New School for Social Research

  • Signe Predmore

    University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • Facebook
  • X
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
Georgetown University
  • Contact
  • Careers
  • Maps

Mortara Building
3600 N Street, NW
Washington, DC 20007
P. +1 (202) 687-6514
mortaracenter@georgetown.edu

  • Accessibility
  • Copyright Information
  • Privacy Policy
  • Notice of Non-Discrimination
© 2025 Walsh School of Foreign Service