Abstract

This paper explores, by using suitable quantitative techniques, to what extent the intellectual proximity among scholarly journals is also proximity in terms of social communities gathered around the journals. Three fields are considered: statistics, economics and information and library sciences. Co-citation networks represent intellectual proximity among journals. The academic communities around the journals are represented by considering the networks of journals generated by authors writing in more than one journal (interlocking authorship: IA), and the networks generated by scholars sitting on the editorial board of more than one journal (interlocking editorship: IE). Dissimilarity matrices are considered to compare the whole structure of the networks. The CC, IE, and IA networks appear to be correlated for the three fields. The strongest correlation is between CC and IA for the three fields. Lower and similar correlations are obtained for CC and IE, and for IE and IA. The CC, IE, and IA networks are then partitioned in communities. Information and library sciences is the field in which communities are more easily detectable, whereas the most difficult field is economics. The degrees of association among the detected communities show that they are not independent. For all the fields, the strongest association is between CC and IA networks; the minimum level of association is between IE and CC. Overall, these results indicate that intellectual proximity is also proximity among authors and among editors of the journals. Thus, the three maps of editorial power, intellectual proximity, and authors communities tell similar stories.

Highlights

  • The main objects analyzed in this paper are scholarly journals and communities gathered around them

  • The main aim of this paper was to explore, by using suitable quantitative techniques, to what extent the intellectual proximity among scholarly journals is a proximity in terms of social communities gathered around the journals

  • For information about the academic communities around journals, we have considered the networks of journals generated by authors writing in more than one journal as well as the networks generated by scholars sitting on the editorial boards of more than one journal

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The main objects analyzed in this paper are scholarly journals and communities gathered around them. If two journals share the same persons on their editorial boards, it can be assumed that they have at least similar or complementary editorial policies, because they are managed by similar groups of scholars (Baccini et al, 2009) From another perspective, editors have the power to push the paper selection processes toward decisions favoring departmental colleagues, or disciples, and so on (Klein & DiCola, 2004; Laband & Piette, 1994). The basic idea is to explore to what extent the social proximity among journals observed in the network of the editorial boards is similar to the social/intellectual proximity observed in the IA network and in the intellectual proximity in the CC network This question is explored by considering the IE, IA, and CC networks in three fields: economics (EC), statistics (STAT), and information and library science (ILS).

JOURNAL NETWORKS DATA
DISSIMILARITIES AMONG NETWORKS
CORRELATIONS AMONG COMMUNITIES OF JOURNALS
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
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