This volume contends that Evidential Pluralism-an account of the
epistemology of causation, which maintains that in order to establish a
causal claim one needs to establish the existence of a correlation and
the existence of a mechanism-can be fruitfully applied to the social
sciences. Through case studies in sociology, economics, political
science and law, it advances new philosophical foundations for causal
enquiry in the social sciences. The book provides an account of how to
establish and evaluate causal claims and it offers a new way of thinking
about evidence-based policy, basic social science research and mixed
methods research. As such, it will appeal to scholars with interests in
social science research and methodology, the philosophy of science and
evidence-based policy.