Abstract

The publication of academic research is important for its contribution to the body of knowledge. A periodic analysis of journal content leads to the identification of research practices; while it also identifies the challenges that researchers face. The South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences (SAJEMS) is considered to be one of the leading publications in the field of economic and managerial research in South Africa. The SAJEMS was selected as the unit of analysis; and a content analysis was conducted on 257 articles published during the seven-year period 2004 - 2010. The main purpose of this study was to investigate the input and output factors relating to published articles, including questions on authors and article content, such as the various methodological approaches. The findings revealed that there has been a decrease in co-authored articles during the period 2005-2008. Although the contribution by practitioners increased significantly in 2005 and 2008, the majority of the articles are still authored predominantly by academics. It is promising to see that international authors were involved in nearly 20 per cent of the articles contributed. When it came to the methodological approaches, the articles employed largely non-probability sampling designs. Furthermore, almost two-thirds of the articles published in SAJEMS were based on quantitative research designs. This content analysis reveals the current research practices published in the SAJEMS. It provides food for thought for academics.

Highlights

  • Academic researchers regularly receive the most recent issues of various scholarly journals reporting on the latest academic research

  • There has been no journal-specific evaluation or review of the research published in the SAJEMS; and this study aims to provide insight into the state of South African academic economic and management research by analysing and reporting on the content of this journal from the year 2004 - 2010

  • The study showed that academic authors who are linked to an institution accounted for 86.7 per cent of those publishing in the SAJEMS

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Summary

Introduction

Academic researchers regularly receive the most recent issues of various scholarly journals reporting on the latest academic research. Taking stock of the content of journals has several benefits. It acts as a guide for potential authors regarding changes in content and methodology that might help direct future publications. Such reviews could reveal new opportunities for the journal, and could possibly identify areas relevant for special editions (Phelan, Ferreira & Salvador, 2002). It may help to reveal trends in the literature, identify gaps, assist journal editors in developing agendas for guiding future research efforts, and lead to publishing opportunities (Bush & Grant, 1994)

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