Inégalités en science
Citation proximus: The role of social and semantic ties on citations.
This content is not available in the selected language. Despite being considered as key indicators of research impact, citations are shaped by factors beyond intrinsic research quality—such as including prestige, social networks, and research topics. While the Matthew Effect explains how prestige accumulates, our study contextualizes this by showing that other mechanisms also play a […] Read more
Understanding discrepancies in the coverage of OpenAlex: the case of China.
This content is not available in the selected language. Citations indexes play a crucial role for understanding how science is produced,disseminated, and used. However, these databases often face a critical trade-off:those offering extensive and high-quality coverage are typically proprietary,whereas publicly accessible datasets frequently exhibit fragmented coverage andinconsistent data quality. OpenAlex was developed to address this […] Read more
Scholarly publishing’s hidden diversity: How exclusive databases sustain the oligopoly of academic publishers
Abstract Global scholarly publishing has been dominated by a small number of publishers for several decades. This paper revisits the data on corporate control of scholarly publishing by analyzing the relative shares of scholarly journals and articles published by the major publishers and the “long tail” of smaller, independent publishers, using Dimensions and Web of […] Read more
Applying an Intersectional Lens to Author Composition at Women’s Colleges, Historically Black Colleges and Universities, and Hispanic Serving Institutions in the United States.
This content is not available in the selected language. Our analysis reinforces the overrepresentation of White authors across institution types, even within those with missions or threshold-based criteria that primarily serve a non-White student population. The most striking observation from our institutional analysis was the proportional overrepresentation of White and Asian men and women as […] Read more
The Howard-Harvard effect: Institutional reproduction of intersectional inequalities
This content is not available in the selected language. The production of research and faculty in the US higher education system is concentrated within a few institutions. Concentration of research and resources affects minoritized scholars and the topics with which they are disproportionately associated. This paper examines topical alignment between institutions and authors of varying […] Read more
Avoiding bias when inferring race using name-based approaches.
This content is not available in the selected language. Racial disparity in academia is a widely acknowledged problem. The quantitative understanding of racial-based systemic inequalities is an important step towards a more equitable research system. However, because of the lack of robust information on authors’ race, few large-scale analyses have been performed on this topic. […] Read more
