Keywords
publications, general interest, accounting research, promotion and tenure
Abstract
Academic research has a role in advancing and enlightening society in broad areas of study. Many forces interact to influence the directions, topics, and methodologies used in research. In this paper, we explore and discuss the relationships between the top general-interest and specialist accounting journals. We test whether top journals (e.g., “Top 3” or “Top 6”), relative to a set of high-quality but specialist journals, (1) are perceived to be general in what they will consider publishing, (2) have historically published diverse sets of articles, (3) have editorial board members with diverse sets of interests and skills, and (4) publish the most highly cited articles by topic area and methodology. The results suggest that some of the top journals are not as general as their mission statements suggest and that they do not publish the most highly cited articles in some topic areas and methodologies. These results may help institutions consider whether “counting” only the top journals is an appropriate measure for judging faculty scholarship. The results suggest that counting articles in the traditional top journals alone will be problematic if institutions want to promote research in a broad range of accounting topics and issues in the profession.
Original Publication Citation
Summers, S. L., and D. A. Wood. 2017. An evaluation of the general vs. specialist nature of top accounting journals. Accounting Horizons, 31 (2): 105-124. DOI: 10.2308/acch-51712.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Summers, Scott L. and Wood, David A., "An Evaluation of the General vs. Specialist Nature of Top Accounting Journals" (2017). Faculty Publications. 8282.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/8282
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
2017
Publisher
Accounting Horizons
Language
English
College
Marriott School of Business
Department
Accountancy
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