Wind Farms in Canada
As pollution and global warming threaten our environment, wind farms represent a particularly sustainable response via the creation of energy from wind.
In Canada, the wind farms are becoming more and more popular and a question is, at this stage, being posed relative to the means in which these farms generate benefits and costs. Specifically, the question is whether the benefits of constructing such a farm outweigh its costs. In order to answer this particular query, the current chapter focuses on the collection and analysis of information. The data collected originates from various sources and contexts and is comprised in the form of the case study. The following subsection of the chapter then deals with the presentation of the methodology used in the collection of information. Emphasis is then placed on the actual information retrieved, through both review of the available literature, as well as the construction of the case study. Finally, the chapter comes to an end with a section summarizing and restating the most important findings of the research and analysis conducted.
2. Methodology
The methodology used throughout this chapter -- and throughout the entire project in fact -- is represented by the case study. The case studies are integrant parties of the qualitative approach to research projects. Qualitative research approaches are characterized by a wide array of elements, the most relevant of them being presented below:
Qualitative research endeavors -- among which the case study -- are efforts of the researcher to understand the behavior of the studied community through the sustained observation of the selected sample.
Qualitative research efforts complete their objectives through approaches based on words and personal observations and interpretations. This is crucially different from the quantitative approaches to research, which base their activities on numeric data, which is statistically manageable.
The findings retrieved from qualitative research endeavors only explain the phenomenon within the context of the limited sample which has been created for research purposes. Quantitative research on the other hand generates results which can be extrapolated to explain the phenomenon within the context of the wider community outside the selected sample (Saunders, Lewis and Thornhill, 2009).
In terms of the case study, as a particular tool to conducting research, it has to be noted that it provides the research process with numerous insights linked to various issues pertaining to the assessed phenomenon. In other words, while other research methodologies will assess in detail a specific issue pegged to the construction of wind farms in Canada, the case study approach allows the researcher to simultaneously assess numerous issues pegged to the greater topic. Sue Soy (2006) at the University of Texas at Austin described the use of the case study as a research tool within the following terms:
"Case study research excels at bringing us to an understanding of a complex issue or object and can extend experience or add strength to what is already known through previous research. Case studies emphasize detailed contextual analysis of a limited number of events or conditions and their relationships. Researchers have used the case study research method for many years across a variety of disciplines" (Soy, 2006).
In terms of the rationale for using the case study as a research tool, its benefits and limitations, these are generally those of using any process of qualitative research. On the one hand, while the case study does not generate results which can be generalized, it does lead to a superior understanding of the phenomenon within the selected sample; a qualitative (statistic) approach would not generate as in depth results as the case study would.
Then, another argument in favor of using the case study is represented by its flexibility as opposed to the rigidity of the statistical approach. In this order of ideas, the quantitative approach is based on a limited number of variables and their numeric interpretation. The study is as such focused on these variables and is not flexible to include others, however new important variables could be identified throughout the course of the actual research. The case study on the other hand is more flexible and it allows the integration of new information, as this is uncovered throughout the actual development of the project. This feature explains why differences might occur between the information initially integrated in the research proposal and the data to be actually revealed in the final project.
Finally, the last argument in favor of the case study is represented by the fact that the research project is competed and constructed in a manner which is...
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