Tuesday, September 22, 2015

THEORIES OF CORPORATION PERSONALITY IN COMPANY LAW

·         THEORIES OF CORPORATION PERSONALITY :

There are many writers who argue that a corporation has a physical existence having its own will or mind.  On the other hand, there are jurists who consider the personality of a corporation a mere myth or fiction.

(i)       Fiction Theory : Its most famous exponent is Savigny & the principal British advocate is SalmondJuristic persons r only treated as if they r persons, i.e., h/beings.  It regards the legal personality of entities other than h/being as the result of a fiction.  It presupposes that only h/beings r properly called personsCorporation is not real person as it has no will, mind & ability.  Salmond said, “Group has reality or existence, but has no real personality”.  To Savigny, “Every single man & only the single man is capable of rights (only man is capable of right)The original concept of personality must coincide with the idea of man.”  This theory is most applicable to English Law where courts hv not proceeded on any hard & fast principle in recognition of juristic persons.  There is much flexibility & it can accommodate various decisions on legal personality. 

(ii)      Concession Theory : This theory is allied to the fiction theoryIt regards the dignity of being a ‘juristic person’ to be conceded by the State, i.e., the law.  The identification of ‘law’ with ‘State’ is necessary, but not for the fiction theory.  It is a matter of discretion for the StateIt has been used for political purposes to strengthen the State & to suppress autonomous bodies within it.  This grant or concession can be withdrawn by the State, if the entities violate the restraints placed upon them.  This theory is also supported by Savigny, Salmond & Dicey.
(iii)     Realist Theory : Gierke is the principal exponent & Maitland a sympathiser / supporterJuristic persons enjoy a real existence as a group.  Gierke speaks of the group as having real mind, real will & real power of action.  A corporation has all the characteristics which the natural person has.  Corporation is a living organism like natural h/being which possesses rights.     A group / corporation tends to become a unit & to function as such.  Therefore, juristic persons are real in the same sense in which human beings are.      Legal personality is not fictitious, nor it depends upon State’s recognition.

(iv)     Bracket/Symbolist Theory : The principal exponent is Ihering.  According to this theory, juristic personality is only a symbol to facilitate the working of the corporation.  Only the members of the corporation are persons in true sense & around them a bracket is put to indicate that they r to be treated as one unit, when they have formed themselves into a corporation.  The members of a corporation or the beneficiaries of a foundation are the only ‘persons’.  Juristic person is a symbol to put a bracket on the members in order to treat them as a unitIt is only for the sake of convenienceIt assumes that use of the word ‘person’ is confined to human beings.  Its weakness is that it is unable to indicate when the bracket to be removed & the mask lifted for the purpose of taking note of mem. constituting the corp.  Ltd. co. is not same as its members.

(v)      Purpose Theory : The German jurist Brinz propounded this theory & was developed in England by BakerThis theory is based on the assumption that ‘person’ is applicable only to human beings; he alone can be subject-matter of rights & duties.  To so-called juristic persons are not persons at all.  Since jural relations can only vest in human beings, juristic person should be regarded simply as ‘subject-less properties’ designed for certain purposesIt was designed mainly to explain the vacant inheritance, hereditas jacens, of Roman lawIt is not applicable to English of Indian law where judges have repeatedly held that corporations r persons & to challenge this usage would amount simply to using the word differently from judges.  { To Duguit, ‘purpose’ assumed a different meaning.  The endeavour of law is the achievement of social solidarity.  If a given group is pursuing a purpose, which conforms to social solidarity, all activities falling within that purpose deserve protection.  He rejected the idea of collective will as unproven, but there can be, he said, collective purpose. }

(vi)     Hohfeld’s Theory : He drew a distinction b/w h/beings & juristic personsJuristic persons are the creation of arbitrary rules of procedure, which limit the extent of their responsibility.  His theory is closely related to Bracket Theory.  He says, “Only h/beings have claims, duties, powers & liabilities; transactions r conducted by them & it is they who ultimately become entitled & responsible”.  The corporate person is merely a procedural form used to work out a complex mass of jural relation.  It is purely analytical & analyses a corp. out of existence.
(vii)    Kelsen’s Theory : He rejected any contrast b/w h/beings & natural persons & juristic personsThe law is concerned with h/beings only as their conduct is the subject of rules, duties & claims.  He also rejected the definition of person as an entity which has claims & duties.  It is also purely analytical.  It doesn’t explain why the special set of rules is invoked in the case of corp., but not in partnerships. There is no diff. b/w natural & legal person, per Kelsen.

(viii)   Theory of Enterprise Entity : The corporate entity is based on the reality of the underlying enterpriseApproval by law of the corporate form establishes a prima facie case that the assets, activities & responsibilities of the corp. r part of the enterprise.  Where there is no formal approval by law, a., a. & r. of the unit r determined by the underlying enterprise.

(ix)     Organism Theory : This theory is closely associated with the Realist Theory.  It asserts that groups r persons because they r organisms & correspond to h/beingsThey have a real lifeThey have a group will, independent of the wills of its component members

(x)      Institutional Theory : This theory is also closely connected with the Realist Theory.  It marks a shift from an individualist to a collective outlook.    The individual is integrated into the institution & becomes part of it

Conclusions : In the first place, no theory takes into account all aspects of the problem and, thus, criticism becomes easy.

The theories, that have been considered, are philosophical, political or analyticalThey are not so much concerned with finding solutions to practical problems as with trying to explain the meaning of the word ‘person’.  Courts, on the other hand, faced with the solving of practical problems, have proceeded according to policy, not logic.  The objectives of the law are not uniform.


There is no essence underlying the various uses of ‘person’Its application to things other than human beings is purely a matter of legal convenience.             If corps. aggregate are ‘persons’, then p/hips & trade unions should be too.  Neither the linguistic nor legal usages of ‘person’ are logicalThe error lies in supposing that there should always be logic.






THEORIES OF CORPORATION PERSONALITY

·         THEORIES OF CORPORATION PERSONALITY :

There are many writers who argue that a corporation has a physical existence having its own will or mind.  On the other hand, there are jurists who consider the personality of a corporation a mere myth or fiction.

(i)       Fiction Theory : Its most famous exponent is Savigny & the principal British advocate is SalmondJuristic persons r only treated as if they r persons, i.e., h/beings.  It regards the legal personality of entities other than h/being as the result of a fiction.  It presupposes that only h/beings r properly called personsCorporation is not real person as it has no will, mind & ability.  Salmond said, “Group has reality or existence, but has no real personality”.  To Savigny, “Every single man & only the single man is capable of rights (only man is capable of right)The original concept of personality must coincide with the idea of man.”  This theory is most applicable to English Law where courts hv not proceeded on any hard & fast principle in recognition of juristic persons.  There is much flexibility & it can accommodate various decisions on legal personality. 

(ii)      Concession Theory : This theory is allied to the fiction theoryIt regards the dignity of being a ‘juristic person’ to be conceded by the State, i.e., the law.  The identification of ‘law’ with ‘State’ is necessary, but not for the fiction theory.  It is a matter of discretion for the StateIt has been used for political purposes to strengthen the State & to suppress autonomous bodies within it.  This grant or concession can be withdrawn by the State, if the entities violate the restraints placed upon them.  This theory is also supported by Savigny, Salmond & Dicey.
(iii)     Realist Theory : Gierke is the principal exponent & Maitland a sympathiser / supporterJuristic persons enjoy a real existence as a group.  Gierke speaks of the group as having real mind, real will & real power of action.  A corporation has all the characteristics which the natural person has.  Corporation is a living organism like natural h/being which possesses rights.     A group / corporation tends to become a unit & to function as such.  Therefore, juristic persons are real in the same sense in which human beings are.      Legal personality is not fictitious, nor it depends upon State’s recognition.

(iv)     Bracket/Symbolist Theory : The principal exponent is Ihering.  According to this theory, juristic personality is only a symbol to facilitate the working of the corporation.  Only the members of the corporation are persons in true sense & around them a bracket is put to indicate that they r to be treated as one unit, when they have formed themselves into a corporation.  The members of a corporation or the beneficiaries of a foundation are the only ‘persons’.  Juristic person is a symbol to put a bracket on the members in order to treat them as a unitIt is only for the sake of convenienceIt assumes that use of the word ‘person’ is confined to human beings.  Its weakness is that it is unable to indicate when the bracket to be removed & the mask lifted for the purpose of taking note of mem. constituting the corp.  Ltd. co. is not same as its members.

(v)      Purpose Theory : The German jurist Brinz propounded this theory & was developed in England by BakerThis theory is based on the assumption that ‘person’ is applicable only to human beings; he alone can be subject-matter of rights & duties.  To so-called juristic persons are not persons at all.  Since jural relations can only vest in human beings, juristic person should be regarded simply as ‘subject-less properties’ designed for certain purposesIt was designed mainly to explain the vacant inheritance, hereditas jacens, of Roman lawIt is not applicable to English of Indian law where judges have repeatedly held that corporations r persons & to challenge this usage would amount simply to using the word differently from judges.  { To Duguit, ‘purpose’ assumed a different meaning.  The endeavour of law is the achievement of social solidarity.  If a given group is pursuing a purpose, which conforms to social solidarity, all activities falling within that purpose deserve protection.  He rejected the idea of collective will as unproven, but there can be, he said, collective purpose. }

(vi)     Hohfeld’s Theory : He drew a distinction b/w h/beings & juristic personsJuristic persons are the creation of arbitrary rules of procedure, which limit the extent of their responsibility.  His theory is closely related to Bracket Theory.  He says, “Only h/beings have claims, duties, powers & liabilities; transactions r conducted by them & it is they who ultimately become entitled & responsible”.  The corporate person is merely a procedural form used to work out a complex mass of jural relation.  It is purely analytical & analyses a corp. out of existence.
(vii)    Kelsen’s Theory : He rejected any contrast b/w h/beings & natural persons & juristic personsThe law is concerned with h/beings only as their conduct is the subject of rules, duties & claims.  He also rejected the definition of person as an entity which has claims & duties.  It is also purely analytical.  It doesn’t explain why the special set of rules is invoked in the case of corp., but not in partnerships. There is no diff. b/w natural & legal person, per Kelsen.

(viii)   Theory of Enterprise Entity : The corporate entity is based on the reality of the underlying enterpriseApproval by law of the corporate form establishes a prima facie case that the assets, activities & responsibilities of the corp. r part of the enterprise.  Where there is no formal approval by law, a., a. & r. of the unit r determined by the underlying enterprise.

(ix)     Organism Theory : This theory is closely associated with the Realist Theory.  It asserts that groups r persons because they r organisms & correspond to h/beingsThey have a real lifeThey have a group will, independent of the wills of its component members

(x)      Institutional Theory : This theory is also closely connected with the Realist Theory.  It marks a shift from an individualist to a collective outlook.    The individual is integrated into the institution & becomes part of it

Conclusions : In the first place, no theory takes into account all aspects of the problem and, thus, criticism becomes easy.

The theories, that have been considered, are philosophical, political or analyticalThey are not so much concerned with finding solutions to practical problems as with trying to explain the meaning of the word ‘person’.  Courts, on the other hand, faced with the solving of practical problems, have proceeded according to policy, not logic.  The objectives of the law are not uniform.


There is no essence underlying the various uses of ‘person’Its application to things other than human beings is purely a matter of legal convenience.             If corps. aggregate are ‘persons’, then p/hips & trade unions should be too.  Neither the linguistic nor legal usages of ‘person’ are logicalThe error lies in supposing that there should always be logic.






LEGAL PERSONALITY

PAPER  IV  :  LEGAL  THEORY


I)       LEGAL PERSONALITY (UNIT – IV) :

Jurisprudence studies legal rights & duties.  It is necessary that there should be a person to whom legal rights & duties may be ascribed.  The term ‘person’ or ‘personality’ has been the object of legal & philosophical controversy from times immemorial.  A person in law is not confined to any human being, but is given an extended meaning which includes entities / associations other than h/beings

(i)       The term ‘person’ covers under its legal shadows not only natural persons, but also the artificial persons.  Natural persons mean human beings or those who r born by nature.  Legal persons mean beings & things which r treated as persons by law.  They r created by law only.

(ii)      In modern times, with very few exceptions, legal personality is granted to all the human beings.  However, sometimes, human beings are not legal persons – minors, lunatics, etc.  The legal personality granted to human beings begins at birth and ends with the death.

(iii)     Legal theory assumes a person an entity capable of suing & being sued.

The word ‘person’ is derived from the Latin term ‘persona’, which meant the actor’s mask through which his voice must be soundedLater on, it came to be used for those who could bear rights & duties. But at present, it has acquired the meaning of denoting a being which is capable of sustaining legal rights & duties.  Thus, any person, whether natural or artificial, capable of rights & duties would be a legal person irrespective of the fact that he is a human being.

Salmond observes, “A person is any being, whether a human being or not, whom the law regards as capable of rights & duties”.  Gray defines ‘person’ as an entity to which rights & duties may be attributed.

It, therefore, means human being or a body of persons or a corporation or a legal entity that is recognised by law as the subject of rights & duties.  In other words, the term ‘legal person’ has immediate relationship with legal rights & duties as without that, there can’t be a legal person.

The Legal Status of Animals : In ancient times, animals were regarded as persons.  In middle age also, there r instances of the trial of birds & animals.  In modern times, no legal system recognises animals as bearer of rights & dutiesAnimals do not have rights & duties and, thus, they can’t be person or legal  person.   They r merely things & no animal can be the owner of property.  A trust made in favour of animals is a trust of imperfect obligation & can’t be enforced.  However, there r two cases in which beasts may be thought to possess legal rights – (i) cruelty to animals is an offence; & (ii) a trust for the benefit of a particular class of animals is valid & enforceable as a public charitable trust in England.  Similarly, in India, a charitable trust can be created for the maintenance of stray cattle, broken horses & other animals.

The Legal Status of Dead Men : Generally speaking, the personality of a human being may be said to commence existence on birth & cease to exist at death.  Dead men are no longer persons in the eyes of law.  Dead men don’t remain as bearers of rights & duties as the action dies with the death of a man (actio personalis mortiur cum persona). 

But the law, in certain matters, recognises & protects the desires & interests of the deceased.  There are three rights in this respect – (i) about the deceased’s body; (ii) his reputation; & (iii) his estate.  So far as dead man’s body is concerned, the criminal law secures burial to all dead menThe reputation of a dead man is also to some extent protected by the criminal law.  A libel upon dead man is punished as misdemeanour – but only when its publication is in effect an attack upon the interests of the living persons.  Similarly, the law recognises the right of the deceased to regulate & control his property according to his desire even when he is not living.  But here, deceased has no right over property and only the person in whose favour Will is made has the legal rights in it after the death of the testator. 

The Legal Status of Unborn Persons : Though the dead possesses no legal personality, it is otherwise with the unborn.  There is nothing in law to prevent a man from owning property before he is born.  Law recognises legal personality to unborn personsThe unborn person has a legal personality & possesses legal rights & dutiesA child in mother’s womb is by fiction treated as already born & regarded as person for many purposesThus, a gift may be made to a child, who is still in the mother’s womb

In Hindu law, a child in womb is considered in existence & entitled to inherit property if he is born aliveIf a partition takes place among the coparceners while the child is in womb, a share is to be reserved for him.  If the share is not reserved, then the partition would re-open & the new born boy would take the same share which he would have taken if he was born before partition.

Under IPC, injury to a child in womb is a punishable offence.  Further, doing something which prevents the safe delivery of a child taking birth alive has also been considered as an offence under the criminal law.

Apart from these rights, he is considered to be capable of owning personal rights also.  If a pregnant woman is awarded death sentence, the execution of sentence shall be postponed till she delivers the child

In short, an unborn person is endowed with legal personalityHowever, the rights conferred on unborn person are contingent upon his taking birth alive when they are transformed into vested rights.     

To reiterate, a legal person is any subject-matter other than a human being to which the law attributes personality such as institutions, groups of human beings, corporations, etc.  It is by a fiction of law that they are treated persons.
In State Trading Corporation of India v. Commercial Tax Officer, Hidayatullah, J. dealt at length with the effect of incorporation of a company or corporation & held that the idea of legal personality emerges from the moment of incorporation.  The incorporation has no physical existence.  It is merely an abstraction of law.
There are two kinds of corporations – corporation aggregate & corporation sole.

·         Corporation Aggregate :
1.   A corporation aggregate is an association of h/beings united for the purpose of forwarding their certain interests, e.g. Ltd. Cos.
2.   Such a company is formed by a number of persons, who as shareholders of the company contribute or promise to contribute to the capital of the company, for furtherance of a common object.
3.   Their liability is limited to the extent of their share-holding in the company.  A limited company is thus formed by the personification of the shareholders.
4.   The property of the company is not that of the shareholders, but its own property.  Its assets & liabilities r different from that of its members.  The shareholders have a right to receive dividends from the profits of company but not the property of the company.  
5.   For certain purposes, company has an independent existence from those of its members & it is for this reason that the co. may become insolvent but its members may still be rich & wealthy.
6.   Conversely also, the insolvency of the members does not adversely affect the co. & it may continue to have a flourishing business.
7.   The death of members doesn’t finish the existence of the co., e.g., in the AGM of a co., all the members died due to a bomb-explosion, but it didn’t affect the existence of the co. & it continued to function as before.
8.   It can sue & be sued in its own name.

·         Corporation Sole :
1.   Corporation sole is an incorporated series of successive persons.  It consists of a single person who is personified & regarded by law as a legal person.   In other words, a single person, who in exercise of some office or function, deals in the legal capacity & has rights & duties.
2.   Generally, corporation sole r the holders of a public office which r recognised by law as corporation.
3.   Its chief characteristic is "continuous entity endowed with a capacity for endless duration".  A corporation sole is perpetual, e.g., the President of India, the Governor, the British Crown.
4.   The UOI and the States have also been recognised as corporate entities u/Art. 300.  The Ministers of the Union or State Govt. r not legal or constitutional entity, therefore, they r not corporation sole as they r appointed by the President or the Governors and are 'Officers' within the meaning of Art. 53 & 154.  They r not personally liable for their acts or omissions nor r they directly liable in a Court of Law for their official acts.  It is the State or the Centre which is liable for tort or breach of contract committed by a Minister in his official capacity.
5.   A Corporation sole is distinguishable from "a mere succession of officers or persons exercising the same rights."  If a corporation sole exists, an occupant of an office can generally acquire property for the benefit of his successors as well as himself, he can generally recover for injury inflicted on property pertaining to the office while such property was in the hands of his predecessor and he can sometimes enter into a contract which will bind or endure to the advantage of his successors."
6.   Corp. sole is an illustration of double capacity.  The King of England exercises the function of the Crown & in his capacity as the constitutional head, he can confer rights & duties upon himself as an individual.  The natural person may owe a duty to himself as a legal person.  Same is the position of the President of India.  As regards the British Crown, it is generally said, "The king is dead, long live the king."  This proverb indicates the double capacity of the Crown as a corp. sole, the first part refers to the Crown as a natural person, i.e., individual, while the latter part expresses his position as a legal personality.  It means that even after the death of the king, his legal capacity as a Crown remains in existence as a corp. sole.

7.   The object of corpn. sole is similar to that of corpn. aggregate.  In it a single person holding a public office holds the office in a series of succession, meaning thereby that with his death, his property, right & liabilities etc., do not extinguish but they r vested in the person who succeeds him.  Thus on the death of a corporation sole, his natural personality is destroyed but legal personality continues to be represented by the successive person.  In consequence, the death of a corpn. sole does not adversely affect the interests of the public in general.

RESEARCH DESIGN

RESEARCH DESIGN :

(i) Method of research design:

Research design is the arrangement of conditions for collection and analysis of

data in manner that aims to combine relevance to the research purpose with economy

in procedure. In fact, the research design is the conceptual structure within which

research is conducted; it constitutes the blueprint for the collection, measurement and

analysis of data. As such the design includes an online of what the researcher will do

from writing the hypothesis and its operational implications to the final analysis of data.

More explicitly, the design decisions happen to be in respect of :

1. What is the study about?

2. What is the study being made?

3. What type of data is required?

4. Where can the required data be found?

5. What periods of times will study include?

6. What will be the sample design?

7. What techniques of data collection will be used?

8. How will data be analyzed?

9. In what style will the report be prepared?

(ii) Case study method :

The case study method is very popular from qualitative analysis and involves a

careful and complete observation of a social unit, be that unit a person, family, an

institution, a cultural group or even the entire community. It is a method of study in

depth rather than breadth. The case study places more emphasis on the full analysis of

a limited number of events or conditions and their interrelations. The case study deals

with the processes that take place and their inter relationship.

Broadly speaking research design refers to the visualization of the entire process

of conducting empirical research before it commencement. It is possible to design a

research project beforehand if the investigator is aware of the major stages and

techniques in conducting research and of the purpose of the investigation. Although in

its complete formulation every research design is unique, it resembles all other designs

in the broad outline of conducting research. On the other hand, research designs aimed

at fulfilling different research purposes differ from one another in some of their salient

features.  An attempt is made here to present a skeletal description of the major types

of research designs in terms of their salient common features as well as distinguishing

characteristics.

(iii) Main steps in research design :

The broad outline of the design of a research study may be spelt out in the

following  main steps:

1. Formulation of the research problem.

2. Decision about a suitable population for the study and setting down the sampling

3. Devising tools and techniques for gathering data.

4. Determination of the mode of administering the study.

5. Setting the arrangements for the editing, coding and processing of data.

6. Indicating the procedures and the statistical indices for the analysis of data

7. Deciding about the mode of presentation of the research report.

In the preparation of research design, the first step, namely, the formulation of

the problem of research, is a crucial one because it is at this stage that the purpose of

procedure.

the research is classified and specified, which then suggest the suitable alternatives at

the subsequent steps. This step is also the most creative aspect of the research

endeavour, when the discovery of the tentative solution of the problem is made and the

hypotheses are deduced.

It may be recalled that the proper designing of the various stages of conducting

research is contingent upon a clearcut formulation of the problem. But in this case, for

want of such an exercise, the other steps of conducting the study cannot be properly

charted. Consequently the researcher is obliged to explore the different possibilities to

the best of his ability, drawing liberally upon his own ingenuity. Hence the title –

exploratory study – given to such a research design. It is also called formulative study

because its main purpose itself is to formulate the problem more clearly.

Research procedures in general have to be reliable, accurate and systematic.

But in the case of an exploratory study the investigator is not bound down by such

conditions, his main purposes being to gain insight into the problem and to arrive at

some hypotheses somehow.

Even though it is not possible to lay down clearcut procedures, the investigator

may follow some general guidelines in carrying out his exploratory study, for instance,

re review of the related social science and other pertinent literature might give some

clues for guiding the direction of his inquiry. He can benefit from the discussion of his

problem with some of the persons who have practical experience in the given area.

Analysis of some of the cases from the relevant population, which are strikingly different

from one another, is useful for stimulating his insights. The study has to be pursued until

the investigator comes up with a reasonably satisfactory solution of the problem.

The descriptive study is aimed at measuring the different aspects of a

phenomenon or the characteristics of a population, accurately. The systematic

collection of the existing information from a set of people is known as a survey.

Therefore, the survey or social survey is another name for the descriptive study. It is

mainly a fact finding study.

Since the information from a descriptive study is aimed at an accurate description

of the various characteristics of a population or examining the relationships among the

different characteristics or variables, every step in this research design has to be very

carefully worked out. In the formulation of the problem the objectives of the study and

the different dimensions of the phenomenon to be described, should be clearly indicated

and defined. The variables involved should be operationalised so that their

measurement becomes practicable.

Utmost attention should be paid to the demarcation of the universe or the

population and the procedures for the selection of the sample. Since it is possible to

obtain the information about the characteristics of a population by studying a section

population, in most studies it is only a section which is taken up for investigation and not

the whole of the population. But there are important conditions to be satisfied. First of all

the section must be representative of the total population. A representative section of

the population is known as sample. Second, the sample must be chosen randomly. It is

only from the study of a random sample that it is possible to estimate the characteristics

of a population from the measures of the characteristics of its sample. Since the

descriptive studies are mostly based on samples they are also called sample surveys or

cross sectional surveys. When a descriptive study embraces the total population it is

called a census.

The tools of data collection should be objective, precise and systematic so that

different researchers collecting information from the same persons should arrive at the

same results. As far as possible the information should be such that it is amenable to

quantification. Preparation of scales and indices come in handy for this purpose.

In many descriptive studies involving large samples, teams of research workers

need to be engaged. In such eventualities thought has to be given to the specification of

the types and number of personnel, to their training and to matters pertaining to

supervision and coordination. Unless the work is strictly supervised, the involvement of

a large staff is likely to result in a proliferation of errors.

Accuracy and reliability are needed not only at the time of collection of data but

more so at the state of their processing. Conditioning vary depending upon whether the

processing is done manually or mechanically.

Statistical techniques and indices are often used for the analysis of data. In the

case of sample surveys statistical inference is also necessary for estimating the

characteristics of the population from those of the sample.

The mode of presentation of the results and writing of the report depends upon

the audience in view. Among other matters attention has to be paid to the language,

style and the length of the presentation.

In the descriptive study design every step can be visualized before launching the

empirical investigation. Therefore, it is possible to work out in advance the approximate

outlay on the research project.

(iv) Experimental or explanatory studies :

Scientific knowledge is aimed at answering three kinds of questions: What is it,

how is it, and why is it? The answer to the question “why” is actually the explanation of

the phenomenon in question, and represents the most refined form of knowledge. The

descriptive study design is aimed at answering the questing , “what is it”. It describes a

given state of affairs. The explanatory knowledge, however, is usually formulated in a

theoretical model in a set of deductively related propositions. But the validation of such

a model depends upon testing hypotheses deduced from it. Hypotheses of this kind

affirm cause and effect relationship between two variables, which represent  the answer

to the question, “how is it”.

The experimental design differs from the descriptive study design, among other

respects, in two important ways in as much as the groups studied need not be

representative of their population and the variables under investigation are manipulated.

Therefore, the term sample survey is not applied to be experimental study.  It has been

pointed out that there are different ways of designing an experimental study subject to

the adherence of the same logic of experiment.

The requirements of studying changes in the characteristics of a population, with

their causal basis, are met to some extent by the panel study. The panel method

involves recruiting a sample of individuals representing the universe or population to be

studied, and interviewing them at two or more different points of time, on the problems

under consideration. The same group of individuals which is studied at different points

of time is called the panel.

The panel study resembles the sample survey insofar as the panel is also a

representative sample of the population, but it is different from sample surveys

conducted at different points of time as in these studies; unlike the panel study, fresh

samples the experimental study insofar as the same group is studied more than once,

but unlike the experimental study it does not resort to the controlling of the variables.

In the panel study the core questions of the inquiry are repeated at every

interview, but at every time new questions are also added. Since it is the same group of

individuals which is studied at two or more points of time, at any subsequent point of

time it is possible to identify the individuals who have changed and also to find out the

reasons for their change. Thus the panel study enables us to measure the real change

as well as to ascertain the causes. Since the panel is representative of the population,

from the results of the panel study one can estimate the change in the characteristics of

the population.






DEDUCTIVE METHOD OF RESEARCH

DEDUCTIVE METHOD OF RESEARCH

(i) Deductive method of research :

The method of studying a phenomena by taking some assumptions and

deducting conclusions from these assumptions is known as the deductive method.

Deduction is a process of reasoning from the general to particular or from the universe

to individual, from given premises to necessary conclusions. Deduction is also known as

analytical, abstract and a priori method. It has an abstract approach to the study of

science. When researchers proposed a study of the casual factors of the delinquencies

which are on the increase and which seems serious to them, they have some general

anticipatory idea as to what to observe and what specific facts in the main would be

relevant to their inquiry, even though they may not have realized these implications.

Then, on the basis of their observation, they formulate certain single propositions as to

the casual factors of delinquency. That is, they deduce from the complexities of

observed behaviour certain single ideas. In other words, they use a process of

reasoning about the whole observed situations in order to arrive at a particular idea.

This process of reasoning is called deduction or deductive reasoning.

The earlier scientific studies followed mainly the method of deduction, which is a

method of arriving at conclusions from premises. In deduction it is immaterial whether

the premises are true or false so long as the conclusions follow logically from the

assumptions. All that is needed is to select propositions in such a way that the analysis

of their meanings leads to other propositions. Take for instance the following two

propositions;

1. It is in the nature of weaker persons to become subordinate to stronger ones.

2. Women are weaker than men.

It is possible to deduce a third proposition from these two propositions namely,

(3) women are subordinate to men. The truth or validity of the third statement, would

depend upon the truth of the first two statements which are the premises. But the

method of deduction is indifferent as to the validity of the premises. Therefore, one

cannot be sure about the truth of the third statement.

Deduction is logical reasoning and if we start with good premises, deduction can

serve scientific research in three ways :

1. Deduction help in detecting the questionable assumptions logically involved in what is

believed to be the truth and it multiplies the number of available hypothesis by

formulating the possible alternatives.

2. The logical deductions of its consequences makes clear the meaning of any hypothesis.

3. The process of rigorous deduction is an aid in the attempt to steer clear of irrelevancies

and thus the right principle is found.