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Article
How economists cite literature: citation analysis of two core Pakistani economic journals
Collection Building
  • Ashraf Sharif, Aga Khan University
  • Khalid Mahmood, University of the Punjab
Publication Date
10-1-2004
Document Type
Article
Abstract

Selected volumes of the Pakistan Development Review (PDR) and the Pakistan Economic and Social Review (PESR) were analysed to find the citation pattern of their articles. Eight volumes of each journal were selected, two volumes representing a decade. The results revealed that the PDR has been the most cited journal. The mean score of citations per article remained insignificantly different in the two core journals. More than 50 per cent of the citations from both journals were single-authored. More than 50 per cent of the citations were from non-journal sources, mainly books. Although citations from online sources were seen, it was a negligible number. About 47 per cent of the total citations of the PDR were up to five years old compared with the citations of the PESR, where only 25 per cent fell into this category. Most of the authors used foreign books as citations. There is a significant similarity in the top most cited journals in both cases. Most of the frequently cited journals were from the USA.

Comments

This work was published before the author (Ashraf Sharif) joined Aga Khan University.

Citation Information
Ashraf Sharif and Khalid Mahmood. "How economists cite literature: citation analysis of two core Pakistani economic journals" Collection Building Vol. 23 Iss. 4 (2004) p. 172 - 176
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/ashraf_sharif/2/