About this journal
Aims and scope
Aims and scope
Construction Management and Economics publishes high-quality original research concerning the management and economics of activity in the construction industry. Our concern is the production of the built environment. We seek to extend the concept of construction beyond on-site production to include a wide range of value-adding activities and involving coalitions of multiple actors, including clients and users, that evolve over time. We embrace the entire range of construction services provided by the architecture/engineering/construction sector, including design, procurement and through-life management. We welcome papers that demonstrate how the range of diverse academic and professional disciplines enable robust and novel theoretical, methodological and/or empirical insights into the world of construction. Ultimately, our aim is to inform and advance academic debates in the various disciplines that converge on the construction sector as a topic of research. While we expect papers to have strong theoretical positioning, we also seek contributions that offer critical, reflexive accounts on practice.
Construction Management & Economics now publishes the following article types:
- Research Papers
- Notes - offering a comment on a previously published paper or report a new idea, empirical finding or approach.
- Book Reviews
- Letters - terse, scholarly comments on any aspect of interest to our readership.
- Commentaries
- Obituaries - welcome in relation to significant figures in our field.
All submitted manuscripts are subject to initial appraisal by the Editor, and, if found suitable for further consideration, will enter peer review by independent, anonymous expert referees. All peer review is double anonymized and submission is online via ScholarOne Manuscripts
Journal metrics
Usage
- 398K annual downloads/views
Citation metrics
- 3.0 (2023) Impact Factor
- Q2 Impact Factor Best Quartile
- 3.8 (2023) 5 year IF
- 7.5 (2023) CiteScore (Scopus)
- Q1 CiteScore Best Quartile
- 1.649 (2023) SNIP
- 0.874 (2023) SJR
Speed/acceptance
- 1 days avg. from submission to first decision
- 83 days avg. from submission to first post-review decision
- 17 days avg. from acceptance to online publication
- 13% acceptance rate
Understanding and using journal metrics
Journal metrics can be a useful tool for readers, as well as for authors who are deciding where to submit their next manuscript for publication. However, any one metric only tells a part of the story of a journal’s quality and impact. Each metric has its limitations which means that it should never be considered in isolation, and metrics should be used to support and not replace qualitative review.
We strongly recommend that you always use a number of metrics, alongside other qualitative factors such as a journal’s aims & scope, its readership, and a review of past content published in the journal. In addition, a single article should always be assessed on its own merits and never based on the metrics of the journal it was published in.
For more details, please read the Author Services guide to understanding journal metrics.
Journal metrics in brief
Usage and acceptance rate data above are for the last full calendar year and are updated annually in February. Speed data is updated every six months, based on the prior six months. Citation metrics are updated annually mid-year. Please note that some journals do not display all of the following metrics (find out why).
- Usage: the total number of times articles in the journal were viewed by users of Taylor & Francis Online in the previous calendar year, rounded to the nearest thousand.
Citation Metrics
- Impact Factor*: the average number of citations received by articles published in the journal within a two-year window. Only journals in the Clarivate Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE), Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI), Arts and Humanities Citation Index (AHCI) and the Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) have an Impact Factor.
- Impact Factor Best Quartile*: the journal’s highest subject category ranking in the Journal Citation Reports. Q1 = 25% of journals with the highest Impact Factors.
- 5 Year Impact Factor*: the average number of citations received by articles in the journal within a five-year window.
- CiteScore (Scopus)†: the average number of citations received by articles in the journal over a four-year period.
- CiteScore Best Quartile†: the journal’s highest CiteScore ranking in a Scopus subject category. Q1 = 25% of journals with the highest CiteScores.
- SNIP (Source Normalized Impact per Paper): the number of citations per paper in the journal, divided by citation potential in the field.
- SJR (Scimago Journal Rank): Average number of (weighted) citations in one year, divided by the number of articles published in the journal in the previous three years.
Speed/acceptance
- From submission to first decision: the average (median) number of days for a manuscript submitted to the journal to receive a first decision. Based on manuscripts receiving a first decision in the last six months.
- From submission to first post-review decision: the average (median) number of days for a manuscript submitted to the journal to receive a first decision if it is sent out for peer review. Based on manuscripts receiving a post-review first decision in the last six months.
- From acceptance to online publication: the average (median) number of days from acceptance of a manuscript to online publication of the Version of Record. Based on articles published in the last six months.
- Acceptance rate: articles accepted for publication by the journal in the previous calendar year as percentage of all papers receiving a final decision.
For more details on the data above, please read the Author Services guide to understanding journal metrics.
*Copyright: Journal Citation Reports®, Clarivate Analytics
†Copyright: CiteScore™, Scopus
Editorial board
Editors-in-Chief:
Associate Professor Florence PhuaSchool of Construction Management and Engineering
University of Reading
United Kingdom
Professor Pablo Ballesteros-Perez
Departamento de Proyectos de Ingeniería
Universitat Politècnica de València
Spain
Associate Editors:
Professor Carrie Sturts Dossick
Department of Construction Management
University of Washington
College of Built Environments, 120 Architecture Hall, Box 351610 Seattle, WA 98195
USA
Professor Islam El-adaway
Professor
Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering
Missouri University of Science and Technology
Rolla
MO 65409, USA
Dr Andreas Hartmann
Faculty of Engineering Technology
University of Twente
Horst Complex Z229, P.O. Box 217
7500 AE Enschede, The Netherlands
Professor Christine Räisänen
Department of Architecture and Civil Engineering
Chalmers University of Technology
Construction Management, SE-412 96 Gothenburg,
Sweden
Follow us @CMEJournal
Editorial Assistant
Peer review support team - [email protected]
Honorary Editors
Professor Paul W. Chan
Faculty of Architecture and The Built Environment
Delft University of Technology
Julianalaan 134 - 2628 BL Delft
The Netherlands
Professor Andy Dainty
Manchester Metropolitan University
All Saints Building
Manchester
M15 6BH, UK
Professor Will Hughes
School of Construction Management & Engineering
University of Reading
PO Box 219, Whiteknights
Reading, RG6 6AW, UK
Dr Roine Leiringer
Department of Real Estate and Construction
The University of Hong Kong
Pokfulam
Hong Kong
Editorial Board:
Professor David Arditi - Illinois Institute of Technology, USA
Dr Luiz Brandao - PUC -Rio, Brazil
Professor Jan Bröchner - Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
Professor André Dorée - University of Twente, The Netherlands
Professor Per-Erik Eriksson - Luleå University of Technology, Sweden
Professor Richard Fellows - Professor of Construction Business Management, Civil and Building Engineering, Loughborough, UK
Professor Pernilla Gluch - Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
Dr Stefan Gottlieb - Aalborg University, Denmark
Professor Tina Karrbom Gustavsson - KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
Professor Carl Haas - University of Waterloo, Canada
Professor Makarand Hastak - Purdue University, USA
Professor Amy Javernick-Will - University of Colorado Boulder, USA
Professor Christian Koch - Aarhus University, Denmark
Professor Lauri Koskela - University of Huddersfield, UK
Professor Helen Lingard - RMIT University, Australia
Professor Giorgio Locatelli - Politecnico di Milano, Italy
Professor Martin Loosemore - UNSW, Australia
Professor Ashwin Mahalingam - Indian Institute of Technology, Madras, India
Professor George Ofori - London Southbank University, UK
Professor Miroslaw J. Skibniewski - University of Maryland, USA
Professor Martin Skitmore - Queensland University of Technology, Australia
Dr Simon Smith - University of Edinburgh, UK
Professor Lucio Soibelman - University of Southern California, USA
Professor Martin Tuuli - GIMPA Business School, Ghana
Professor Leentje Volker - University of Twente, The Netherlands
Dr Bo Xia - Queensland University of Technology, Australia
Professor Shuibo Zhang - Tianjin University, China
Abstracting and indexing
Construction Management and Economics is abstracted and indexed in:
ABI/Inform; Architectural Publications Index; Construction and Building Abstracts (CBA); Construction Information Quarterly (Formerly Construction Information Digest); CSA (Advanced Polymers Abstracts, Aluminium Industry Abstracts, ARCOM:Construction Management Abstracts and Indexes,Ceramic Abstracts, Civil Engineering Abstracts,Composites Industry Abstracts, Computer and Information Systems Abstracts, Copper Data Center Database, Corrosion Abstracts,Earthquake Engineering Abstracts,Electronics and Communications Abstracts, Emerging Sources Citation Index, Engineered Materials Abstracts, Environmental Sciences and Pollution Management International Aerospace Abstracts, International Civil Engineering Abstracts, Mechanical & Transportation Engineering Abstracts,Metadex, Risk Abstracts, Solid State and Superconductivity Abstracts, Urban Studies Abstracts); EBSCO (Business Source Corporate, Business Source Elite, Business Source Premier, Corporate Resource Net, TOC Premier); Ei Page One; Elsevier GEOAbstracts; Emerald Abstracts (International Civil Engineering Abstracts); Gale Responsive Databases Inc (Business and Management Practices, Business and Industry); IBZ; Materials Business File; OCLC ArticleFirst Database and OCLC FirstSearch Electronic Collections Database; Scopus; Swets Information Services and Zetoc.
Open access
Construction Management and Economics is a hybrid open access journal that is part of our Open Select publishing program, giving you the option to publish open access. Publishing open access means that your article will be free to access online immediately on publication, increasing the visibility, readership, and impact of your research.
Why choose open access?
- Increase the discoverability and readership of your article
- Make an impact and reach new readers, not just those with easy access to a research library
- Freely share your work with anyone, anywhere
- Comply with funding mandates and meet the requirements of your institution, employer or funder
- Rigorous peer review for every open access article
Article Publishing Charges (APC)
If you choose to publish open access in this journal you may be asked to pay an Article Publishing Charge (APC). You may be able to publish your article at no cost to yourself or with a reduced APC if your institution or research funder has an open access agreement or membership with Taylor & Francis.
Use our APC finder to calculate your article publishing charge
News, offers and calls for papers
News and offers
- Editorial Board Members needed for Construction Management and Economics - apply now
- Special rate of £58/ US$96/ €76 for ARCOM, ASC, AUBEA, CIB & CIOB members-Contact +44 2070175543 or [email protected] to subscribe-Quote XF06801W
12 issues per year
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