Abstract

This study presents an analysis of environmental law research in the natural science and social science fields from a bibliometric perspective. Document type, publication language, annual output, and distributions of countries were quantitatively characterized and compared in the Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED) and the Social Science Index (SSCI). The citation history of highly cited articles and word analysis were used to examine research tendencies and "hotspots" in environmental law research. The results show that from 1992 to 2014 SCI-EXPANDED has published more research in environmental laws than SSCI except in 2011. The USA is the most productive country in both databases. Developing countries such as China, India, and Brazil are among the top 10 productive countries in SCI-EXPANDED, while in that of SSCI, China is the only developing country. The USA had the most frequent collaborations with other countries both in SCI-EXPANDED and SSCI; collaborations were more frequent in SSCI than in the SCI-EXPANDED. Words analysis reveals that "sustainability", "compliance", and "environmental management" are key issues in SSCI, while articles in SCI-EXPANDED pay more attention to "risk assessment", "recycling", "wastewater treatment", and "temperature". "China" is a key issue in research in both natural science and social science field, which indicates the rapid development of environmental law research in China as well as the growing concerns of China's environmental law issues.

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