What is documentary research?

Documentary or bibliographic research is one that seeks to obtain, select, compile, organize, interpret and analyze information on a study object from documentary sources, such as books, archival documents, hemerography, audiovisual records, among others.

This type of research is widely used in the social sciences and is characteristic of the qualitative research model, where it constitutes an objective in itself. However, it is present in all types of research, since only from documentary research is the background of the problem or the state of the question known.

Characteristics of documentary research

Among the most important characteristics of documentary research, we can mention the following:

  • It is common to all types of research with a theoretical or referential foundation, be it in the natural or social sciences;
  • Obtains data from the review of documents of different tenor;
  • Organize the collected data in a coherent way;
  • It allows to rediscover or reinterpret different aspects of a subject;
  • Helps to identify gaps, omissions or misrepresentations in the above reference sources;
  • Suggest new perspectives and / or theories of analysis based on the information obtained;
  • Requires synthesis, deduction and analysis capacity;
  • Provides solidity to the researcher’s conclusions.

Sources of documentary research

In a strategic sense, we speak of two types of essential sources: primary research sources and secondary research sources.

The primary sources of research are those that give first – hand information about the object of study. They are characterized by providing original and relevant information. For example, in the case of a biography, the character’s civil documents (birth certificate and other records) are considered primary sources.

The sources of secondary research are those which have obtained information from another source and are subjected to a screening process, restructuring, analysis and review. Following the example of the biography in process, the secondary sources would be other previous biographies or history books that expose at least a part of the life of the person under study.

Both primary and secondary research sources refer to the following types of documents as appropriate:

  • Printed documentation: itis made up of books; thesis; newspaper publication; archive documents (minutes, reports, correspondence, treaties, contracts, accounting records, etc.);
  • Graphic documents:paintings, photographs, maps, diagrams, infographics, etc .;
  • Audiovisual documents:video records, audio recordings, films, documentaries, among others.
  • Electronic documents: inaddition to digitized documents, we can identify blogs, information on social networks, etc.

Elements of documentary research

The following elements are identified within all documentary research:

  • Documentary unit, that is, the physical or virtual space in which the available sources are located;
  • Documents or sources of information;
  • Study sheets for organizing reading notes.

See also Research Methodology .

Types of documentary research

Informative

Informative documentary research is one that aims to inform everything concerning a specific topic. This type of research describes the object of study in its details, and is in charge of ordering and systematizing the available information in a coherent body of ideas. It is usually distinguished by the way it systematizes information and by providing new approaches.

Exploratory

Exploratory documentary research may aim to explore the validity of certain hypotheses, understand a complex problem through analysis, and / or formulate possible solutions to the problem at hand.

See also Types of research .

Basic structure of a documentary research work

The structure of a documentary research work will depend on the subject and its objective. However, in general terms, a work of this nature has the following basic structure:

  • State of the question;
  • Problem Statement;
  • General and specific objective;
  • Limits and scopes;
  • Theoretical / methodological framework;
  • Analysis of the question;
  • Conclusions;
  • Sources consulted;
  • Annexes (if applicable).

Steps for documentary research

  1. Once the topic has been identified, define the type of sources necessary for the investigation based on the following criteria:
    Relevance;
    b. Comprehensiveness;
    c. Present.
  2. Keep a record of the sources consulted based on one of the current reference standards (APA, Chicago, Harvard);
  3. Organization and analysis of the information obtained from documentary sources.

 

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