Methods & Analytical Writing

Political analysis is neither opinion nor ideological positioning.
It is a structured explanatory practice grounded in evidence, theory, and causal reasoning.

At its core, political analysis seeks to answer a specific question: why did a particular political outcome occur?
Answering that question requires more than description. It requires analytical structure.

This page presents the applied method that guides all analytical work in PoliticLab. It explains how political scientists move from a concrete real-world case to a defensible explanatory argument — and how that argument is translated into rigorous analytical writing. The framework outlined here connects all case studies, theoretical lenses, and thematic categories across the site.

Analysis as a structured process

In PoliticLab, analysis follows a disciplined sequence.

  • A political outcome generates an explanatory question.
  • A theoretical lens is selected to isolate the dominant mechanism.
  • Supporting analytical tools refine scope, clarify constraints, and test plausibility.
  • The reasoning is then translated into structured analytical writing.

Each stage performs a distinct function. When a step is skipped, the result is narrative, description, or opinion — but not analysis.

Political analysis is therefore cumulative and sequential. It is not a shortcut, and it is not improvisation.


How this page fits into PoliticLab

This page works together with:

  • Theories — which explain what analytical lenses are available
  • Case Studies — which show how those lenses are applied in real cases
  • Writing & AI — which supports the production and refinement of analytical text

If the Theories page tells you what tools exist, this page shows you how to use them correctly.

The Analytical Method (Steps)

Step 1 — Defining the Analytical Problem

From description to explanation

Step 2 — Choosing and Applying Theoretical Lenses

Primary and supporting lenses in practice

Step 3 — Analytical Tools and Causal Mechanisms

Institutions, incentives, power, and strategy

Step 4 — Writing Political Analysis

From reasoning to structured argument

Step 5 — AI as an Analytical Assistant

Using AI without outsourcing thinking

Step 6 — Practice & Application

Learning by doing

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