J 2018

Publication patterns in the social sciences and humanities: evidence from eight European countries

KULCZYCKI, Emanuel; Tim C. E. ENGELS; Janne PÖLÖNEN; Kasper BRUUN; Marta DUŠKOVÁ et. al.

Basic information

Original name

Publication patterns in the social sciences and humanities: evidence from eight European countries

Authors

KULCZYCKI, Emanuel (616 Poland); Tim C. E. ENGELS (56 Belgium); Janne PÖLÖNEN (246 Finland); Kasper BRUUN (208 Denmark); Marta DUŠKOVÁ (703 Slovakia); Raf GUNS (56 Belgium); Robert NOWOTNIAK (616 Poland); Michal PETR (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution); Gunnar SIVERTSEN (578 Norway); Andreja ISTENIČ STARČIČ (705 Slovenia) and Alesia ZUCCALA (208 Denmark)

Edition

Scientometrics, Springer, 2018, 0138-9130

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Country of publisher

Netherlands

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14810/18:00102461

Organization

Repository – Repository

UT WoS

000438126800022

EID Scopus

2-s2.0-85044468417

Keywords in English

Publication patterns; Social sciences; Humanities; Language; Publication type; Internationalization
Changed: 5/9/2020 13:19, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

V originále

This study investigates patterns in the language and type of social sciences and humanities (SSH) publications in non-English speaking European countries to demonstrate that such patterns are related not only to discipline but also to each country’s cultural and historic heritage. We investigate publication patterns that occur across SSH publications of the whole of the SSH and of economics and business, law, and philosophy and theology publications in the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Flanders (Belgium), Norway, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia. We use data from 74,022 peer-reviewed publications from 2014 registered in at least one of the eight countries’ national databases and for 272,376 peer-reviewed publications from the period of 2011–2014 registered in at least one of the seven countries’ national databases (for all countries except Slovakia). Our findings show that publication patterns differ both between fields (e.g. patterns in law differ from those in economics and business in the same way in Flanders and Finland) and within fields (e.g. patterns in law in the Czech Republic differ from patterns in law in Finland). We observe that the publication patterns are stable and quite similar in West European and Nordic countries, whereas in Central and Eastern European countries the publication patterns demonstrate considerable changes. Nevertheless, in all countries, the share of articles and the share of publications in English is on the rise. We conclude with recommendations for science policy and highlight that internationalization policies in non-English speaking countries should consider various starting points and cultural heritages in different countries.

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