Abstract
Research on social processes in the production of scientific output suggests that the collective research agenda of a discipline is influenced by its structural features, such as “invisible colleges” or “groups of collaborators” as well as academic “stars” that are embedded in, or connect, these research groups. Based on an encompassing dataset that takes into account multiple publication types including journals and chapters in edited volumes, we analyze the complete co-authorship network of all 1,339 researchers in German political science. Through the use of consensus graph clustering techniques and descriptive centrality measures, we identify the ten largest research clusters, their research topics, and the most central researchers who act as bridges and connect these clusters. We also aggregate the findings at the level of research organizations and consider the inter-university co-authorship network. The findings indicate that German political science is structured by multiple overlapping research clusters with a dominance of the subfields of international relations, comparative politics and political sociology. A small set of well-connected universities takes leading roles in these informal research groups.
Highlights
Political scientists try to describe and explain politics in an objective way
We seek to describe the structure of German political science in order to yield a better understanding of the prominent individuals, groups, institutions, and research topics that take the lead in these social processes
In the first subsection on “Identification of research clusters,” we first plot the locations of the ten largest groups of collaborating researchers returned by the graph consensus clustering approach within the giant component
Summary
Political science, like any other discipline, is not devoid of social processes that affect the research topics being studied and the results being generated [1,2]. Describing and explaining this social component of political science is important for understanding why we know what we know about politics. German political science is a rather young discipline It developed as an autonomous field of research and study only after 1945 [3].
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