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Publishing patterns within the UK accounting and finance academic community

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Publishing patterns within the UK accounting and finance academic community. / Beattie, Vivien; Goodacre, Alan.
In: British Accounting Review, Vol. 36, No. 1, 03.2004, p. 7-44.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Beattie V, Goodacre A. Publishing patterns within the UK accounting and finance academic community. British Accounting Review. 2004 Mar;36(1):7-44. doi: 10.1016/j.bar.2003.08.003

Author

Beattie, Vivien ; Goodacre, Alan. / Publishing patterns within the UK accounting and finance academic community. In: British Accounting Review. 2004 ; Vol. 36, No. 1. pp. 7-44.

Bibtex

@article{a34e9ec43ea14489ab0275ff291a2a02,
title = "Publishing patterns within the UK accounting and finance academic community",
abstract = "This study reports on publishing patterns in the UK and Irish accounting and finance academic community for the 2-year period 1998–1999 using the data contained in the BAR Research Register. It is found that the community has been growing modestly since 1991, with a doubling in the number of PhD-qualified staff (to 30%) and a reduction in the number with a professional qualification (from 81 to 58%). Nearly half of all outputs appear in other than academic journals. The mean number of publications is 1.76 per capita, with significantly more staff active in publishing than in 1991 (44% compared to 35%). However, only 17% publish in a subset of 60 {\textquoteleft}top{\textquoteright} journals. Just over half of all articles are published in the core discipline journals, the rest appearing mainly in management, economics, sociology, education and IT journals. This may indicate a growing maturity in the disciplines, whereby applied research findings are flowing back into related foundation and business disciplines. Nearly two-thirds of academic articles are co-authored, with 25% of contributions coming from outside the community, indicating an openness to interdisciplinary collaboration, collaboration with overseas academics and collaboration with individuals in practice. The findings of this study will be of assistance to those making career decisions (either their own career or decisions involving other people's careers). They also raise awareness of the way in which the accounting and finance disciplines are developing.",
keywords = "Co-authorship, Journals , Non-serial publications , Publication media , Scholarly knowledge development",
author = "Vivien Beattie and Alan Goodacre",
year = "2004",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1016/j.bar.2003.08.003",
language = "English",
volume = "36",
pages = "7--44",
journal = "British Accounting Review",
issn = "0890-8389",
publisher = "Academic Press Inc.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Publishing patterns within the UK accounting and finance academic community

AU - Beattie, Vivien

AU - Goodacre, Alan

PY - 2004/3

Y1 - 2004/3

N2 - This study reports on publishing patterns in the UK and Irish accounting and finance academic community for the 2-year period 1998–1999 using the data contained in the BAR Research Register. It is found that the community has been growing modestly since 1991, with a doubling in the number of PhD-qualified staff (to 30%) and a reduction in the number with a professional qualification (from 81 to 58%). Nearly half of all outputs appear in other than academic journals. The mean number of publications is 1.76 per capita, with significantly more staff active in publishing than in 1991 (44% compared to 35%). However, only 17% publish in a subset of 60 ‘top’ journals. Just over half of all articles are published in the core discipline journals, the rest appearing mainly in management, economics, sociology, education and IT journals. This may indicate a growing maturity in the disciplines, whereby applied research findings are flowing back into related foundation and business disciplines. Nearly two-thirds of academic articles are co-authored, with 25% of contributions coming from outside the community, indicating an openness to interdisciplinary collaboration, collaboration with overseas academics and collaboration with individuals in practice. The findings of this study will be of assistance to those making career decisions (either their own career or decisions involving other people's careers). They also raise awareness of the way in which the accounting and finance disciplines are developing.

AB - This study reports on publishing patterns in the UK and Irish accounting and finance academic community for the 2-year period 1998–1999 using the data contained in the BAR Research Register. It is found that the community has been growing modestly since 1991, with a doubling in the number of PhD-qualified staff (to 30%) and a reduction in the number with a professional qualification (from 81 to 58%). Nearly half of all outputs appear in other than academic journals. The mean number of publications is 1.76 per capita, with significantly more staff active in publishing than in 1991 (44% compared to 35%). However, only 17% publish in a subset of 60 ‘top’ journals. Just over half of all articles are published in the core discipline journals, the rest appearing mainly in management, economics, sociology, education and IT journals. This may indicate a growing maturity in the disciplines, whereby applied research findings are flowing back into related foundation and business disciplines. Nearly two-thirds of academic articles are co-authored, with 25% of contributions coming from outside the community, indicating an openness to interdisciplinary collaboration, collaboration with overseas academics and collaboration with individuals in practice. The findings of this study will be of assistance to those making career decisions (either their own career or decisions involving other people's careers). They also raise awareness of the way in which the accounting and finance disciplines are developing.

KW - Co-authorship

KW - Journals

KW - Non-serial publications

KW - Publication media

KW - Scholarly knowledge development

U2 - 10.1016/j.bar.2003.08.003

DO - 10.1016/j.bar.2003.08.003

M3 - Journal article

VL - 36

SP - 7

EP - 44

JO - British Accounting Review

JF - British Accounting Review

SN - 0890-8389

IS - 1

ER -