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Article
Evaluation criteria development and assessment of purchasing and supply management journals
Journal of Operations Management (2007)
  • George A. Zsidisin, Saint Petersburg State University
  • Michael E. Smith, Western Carolina University
  • Regina C. McNally, Saint Petersburg State University
  • Thomas J. Kull, Saint Petersburg State University
Abstract
Although purchasing and supply management (PSM) is a business function that is critical to supply chain management, a direct examination of the academic journals representing leading PSM research outlets has not been available. Further, most prior studies that compare journals have relied on single-item measures of such evaluation dimensions as quality and relevance. In order to address these research gaps, a survey instrument targeted to purchasing and supply management academics was implemented to explore how they evaluate and rate journals considered important for advancing the field of PSM. The three highest-rated journals in this study that publish PSM research are the Journal of Operations Management, the Journal of Business Logistics, and the Journal of Supply Chain Management. Four journal evaluation constructs emerged: Journal QualityJournal ReputationPSM Practitioner Relevance, and PSM Research Relevance. The results provide guidance for PSM scholars with respect to journals that contribute to the knowledge base in PSM, as well as support an extended understanding of conceptual bases for how scholars evaluate the journals they read and in which they publish.
Keywords
  • Journal evaluation,
  • Purchasing,
  • Supply management,
  • Survey research
Publication Date
January 1, 2007
DOI
10.1016/j.jom.2006.02.008
Citation Information
George A. Zsidisin, Michael E. Smith, Regina C. McNally and Thomas J. Kull. "Evaluation criteria development and assessment of purchasing and supply management journals" Journal of Operations Management Vol. 25 Iss. 1 (2007) p. 165 - 183
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/george-zsidisin/16/