|
on Sociology of Economics |
Issue of 2014‒05‒24
two papers chosen by Jonas Holmström Swedish School of Economics and Business Administration |
By: | Chia-Lin Chang; Michael McAleer (University of Canterbury) |
Abstract: | The paper analyses academic journal quality and impact using quality weighted citations that are based on the widely-used Thomson Reuters ISI Web of Science citations database (ISI). A recently developed Index of Citations Quality (ICQ), based on quality weighted citations, is used to analyse the top 276 Economics and top 10 Econometrics journals in the ISI Economics category using alternative quantifiable Research Assessment Measures (RAMs). It is shown that ICQ is a useful additional measure to the 2-Year Impact Factor (2YIF) and other well known RAMs available in ISI for the purpose of evaluating journal impact and quality, as well as ranking, of Economics and Econometrics journals as it contains information that has very low correlations with the information contained in alternative well-known RAMs. Among other findings, the top Econometrics journals have some of the highest ICQ scores in the ISI category of Economics. |
Keywords: | Research assessment measures, Impact factors, Eigenfactor, Article Influence, Quality weighted citations, Index of citations quality, Economics journal rankings |
JEL: | C18 C81 Y10 |
Date: | 2014–02–24 |
URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:cbt:econwp:14/07&r=sog |
By: | Pedro Garcia Duarte; Yann Giraud |
Abstract: | Some historians argue that the history of economic thought (HET) is useful and important to economists and that historians should remain in economics departments. Others believe that historians’ initiatives toward economists are doomed in advance to failure and that they should instead ally themselves with historians and sociologists of science located in humanities departments. Generally, the contributions that are devoted to reviewing the state of HET take a firm side for either one of these two positions and therefore have a prescriptive view on how history should be written. By contrast, our paper proposes a descriptive account of the kind of contributions to HET that have been published in major economics journals over the past two decades. To avoid definitional issues over HET, we use the B category of the JEL classification to retrieve and analyze the relevant literature. We show that, though contributions to HET are still found in top economics journals, the rate of publication of such papers has become increasingly uneven and the methods and narrative styles they adopt are increasingly remote from that advocated in the sub-disciplinary literature. For this reason, historians who are still willing to address the economics’ community should be more interested in expanding the frontiers of their field rather than in trying to anticipate their targeted readers’ preferences.. |
Keywords: | history of economics; economics journals; American Economic Review; Journal of Economic Literature; Journal of Economic Perspectives; Economic Journal |
JEL: | B20 A14 B40 B29 |
Date: | 2014–05–08 |
URL: | http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:spa:wpaper:2014wpecon6&r=sog |