Is regional science a scientific discipline? Answers from a citation based Social Network Analysis

Gunther Maier, Alexander Kaufmann, Michael Vyborny

Publication: Working/Discussion PaperWU Working Paper

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Abstract

From its very beginnings, regional science has been open to intellectual exchange with many other scientific disciplines. This has led to cross-fertilization, but also to problems concerning the intellectual identity of regional science. After half a century of history of the field, it is time to ask the question, whether or not regional science has developed into a scientific discipline in these decades. In this paper we use cross-citation data between 464 journals in different disciplines to answer this question. With this data set we attempt to find out, how strongly regional science journals are interconnected by citations as compared to their citation links to journals in neighbouring disciplines. We find that when we consider the raw citation data, regional science becomes fragmented with its journals tied to those from economics, geography, planning, etc. When we standardize the citation information to take into account size differences between journals, however, regional science appears to form a strong and well connected dscientific discipline.

Publication series

SeriesSRE - Discussion Papers
Number2008/02

Austrian Classification of Fields of Science and Technology (ÖFOS)

  • 504004 Population statistics
  • 507026 Economic geography
  • 507011 Spatial research
  • 509018 Knowledge management
  • 502014 Innovation research
  • 502052 Business administration
  • 506009 Organisation theory
  • 507
  • 507023 Location development
  • 508007 Communication science
  • 507016 Regional economy
  • 502001 Labour market policy
  • 502017 Logistics
  • 502037 Location planning

WU Working Paper Series

  • SRE - Discussion Papers

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