2 Publishing(3)
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The Research Productivity of New PhDs in Economics: The Surprisingly High Non-Success of the Successful
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The Scholarly Output of Economists: A Ddescription of Publishing Patterns
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The Effects Of Publication Lags On Life-Cycle Research Productivity In Economics
1、
The Research Productivity of New PhDs in Economics: The Surprisingly High Non-Success of the Successful
J
ournal of Economic Perspectives,
2014,28(3):205-216
John P. Conley
,
University of Texas at Austin
Ali Sina Önder,
Vanderbilt University
To explore the effect of this dynamic, we construct a panel dataset consisting of two parts: a census of PhD recipients from academic institutions in the US and Canada who received their economics PhDs between 1986 and 2000, and a complete record of the journal publications of these individuals for the years 1985 to 2006 in the hundreds of journals listed in EconLit. This allows us to look at the distribution of research output of the PhDs from individual departments and also to compare research outcomes across programs of various ranks.
原文链接:
http://www.jstor.org/stable/23800583
2、
The Scholarly Output of Economists: A Description of Publishing Patterns
Atlantic Economic Journal,
2001, 29(3):341-349
Joe C. Davis
,
Trinity University
John H. Huston,
Trinity University
Debra Moore Patterson,
Trinity University
This paper analyzes the research productivity of a cohort of economists over the 15 years following receipt of their doctorate degrees, contrasting their results in publishing articles, books, and textbooks after controlling for the individual characteristics of the economists in the sample. Specifically, this paper considers the quality of graduate school, the type of employment, the general area of dissertation research, and the gender of each individual in the cohort. Primary conclusions indicate that scholarly journals are the most important research outlet, and that book production is a complementary activity to output in scholarly journals. Moreover, publishing success is closely related to the quality of the graduate school attended as well as the type of employer. According to this research, women do not face a statistically significant disadvantage to publishing. Finally, the analysis documents that midway through the 15-year time span covered by this study, output begins to decline, reflecting the post-tenure drop-off in research productivity.
原文链接:
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF02300554
3、
The Effects Of Publication Lags On Life-Cycle Research Productivity In Economics
Economic Inquiry,
2013, 51(2):1251-1276
John P. Conley
,
Vanderbilt University
Mario J. Crucini,
Vanderbilt University
Robert A. Driskill,
Vanderbilt University
Ali Sina Önder,
Uppsala
University