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Original Articles

A Quest for Citations? an Analysis of and Commentary on the Trend Toward Multiple Authorship

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Pages 203-213 | Accepted 01 Sep 1998, Published online: 20 Mar 2014

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (19)

Ranjit Singh, Iqra Sajad Khan, Iqra Shafi, Sawsan Haider Abdullhah Khreis, Ashaq Hussain Najar & Juman Iqbal. (2023) A bibliometric review of World Leisure Journal: an analysis of research published between 2000 and 2022. World Leisure Journal 65:4, pages 484-509.
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Jennifer L. Flanagan. (2015) A Comparison of the Views of College of Business Deans and Faculty on Undeserved Authorships. Journal of Education for Business 90:5, pages 241-246.
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Helen M. Eigenberg & Elizabeth Whalley. (2015) Gender and Publication Patterns: Female Authorship Is Increasing, But Is There Gender Parity?. Women & Criminal Justice 25:1-2, pages 130-144.
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Richard Lemke, Lee Michael Johnson & David Jenks. (2015) Perceptions of the Trend of Collaborative Publications: Results from a Survey of Criminal Justice and Criminology Department Chairs. Journal of Criminal Justice Education 26:1, pages 1-21.
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Jessica M. Kahn. (2014) Social Work Scholarship: Authorship Over Time. Journal of Social Work Education 50:2, pages 262-273.
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Ralph Woehle. (2012) Visualizing the Invisible College: Community Among Authors in Top Social Work Journals. Journal of Social Work Education 48:3, pages 537-552.
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EdgarJ. Manton, DonaldE. English & Thomas Brodnax. (2012) College of Business Faculty Views on Gift Authorships in Business Journals. Journal of Education for Business 87:2, pages 79-85.
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Daphne Ruth Raban, Avishag Gordon & Dorit Geifman. (2011) THE INFORMATION SOCIETY. Information, Communication & Society 14:3, pages 375-399.
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HyeWon Youn, MistyM. Johanson & RobertH. Woods. (2011) Authorship Trends and Perspectives within the Hospitality and Tourism Academy. Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Education 23:1, pages 44-50.
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Gordon R. Mitchell, Carly S. Woods, Matthew Brigham, Eric English, Catherine E. Morrison & John Rief. (2010) The Debate Authors Working Group Model for Collaborative Knowledge Production in Forensics Scholarship. Argumentation and Advocacy 47:1, pages 1-24.
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RobertG. Green & FrankR. Baskind. (2007) THE SECOND DECADE OF THE FACULTY PUBLICATION PROJECT: JOURNAL ARTICLE PUBLICATIONS AND THE IMPORTANCE OF FACULTY SCHOLARSHIP. Journal of Social Work Education 43:2, pages 281-296.
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Gary Holden, Gary Rosenberg & Kathleen Barker. (2005) Bibliometrics. Social Work in Health Care 41:3-4, pages 67-92.
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Gary Rosenberg, Gary Holden & Kathleen Barker. (2005) What Happens to Our Ideas?. Social Work in Health Care 41:3-4, pages 35-66.
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Dawn Hall Apgar & Elaine Congress. (2005) Ethical Beliefs of Social Work Researchers. Journal of Social Service Research 32:2, pages 61-80.
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Brion Sever. (2005) Ranking multiple authors in criminal justice scholarship: An examination of underlying issues. Journal of Criminal Justice Education 16:1, pages 79-100.
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Dawn Hall Apgar & Elaine Congress. (2005) AUTHORSHIP CREDIT: A NATIONAL STUDY OF SOCIAL WORK EDUCATORS' BELIEFS. Journal of Social Work Education 41:1, pages 101-112.
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Michael M. O. Seipel. (2003) Assessing Publication for Tenure. Journal of Social Work Education 39:1, pages 79-88.
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Kristine Tower. (2000) In Our Own Image. Journal of Social Work Education 36:3, pages 575-585.
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Margaret Gibelman & SheldonR. Gelman. (2000) The trend toward multiple authorship in social work: A British and US comparison. Social Work Education 19:4, pages 349-358.
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Articles from other publishers (11)

Ayhan Akpınar, Canberk Çetin & Muhammet Ali Tiltay. (2021) A bibliometric overview of the journal of historical research in marketing between 2009 and 2021. Journal of Historical Research in Marketing 13:3/4, pages 188-213.
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Carola Strandberg, Atanu Nath, Hamed Hemmatdar & Muneer Jahwash. (2016) Tourism research in the new millennium: A bibliometric review of literature in Tourism and Hospitality Research . Tourism and Hospitality Research 18:3, pages 269-285.
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Bryan G. Victor, David R. Hodge, Brian E. Perron, Michael G. Vaughn & Christopher P. Salas-Wright. (2016) The Rise of Co-Authorship in Social Work Scholarship: A Longitudinal Study of Collaboration and Article Quality, 1989–2013. British Journal of Social Work, pages bcw059.
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Mahsa Nikzad, Hamid R. Jamali & Nadjla Hariri. (2011) Patterns of Iranian co-authorship networks in social sciences: A comparative study. Library & Information Science Research 33:4, pages 313-319.
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Lori Leonard. (2010) Negotiating Authorship for Doctoral Dissertation Publications: A Reply. Qualitative Health Research 20:5, pages 723-726.
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Gary HoldenGary Rosenberg, Kathleen Barker & Justin Lioi. (2009) Research on Social Work Practice. Research on Social Work Practice 20:1, pages 11-20.
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Nancy K. Herther. (2009) Research evaluation and citation analysis: key issues and implications. The Electronic Library 27:3, pages 361-375.
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Michael T. Moore & Bryan W. Griffin. (2006) Identification of factors that influence authorship name placement and decisions to collaborate in peer-reviewed, education-related publications. Studies in Educational Evaluation 32:2, pages 125-135.
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Pei-Hsuan Hsieh, Taylor Acee, Wen-Hung Chung, Ya-Ping Hsieh, Hyunjin Kim, Greg D. Thomas, Ji-in You & Daniel H. Robinson. (2004) An alternate look at educational psychologist’s productivity from 1991 to 2002. Contemporary Educational Psychology 29:3, pages 333-343.
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Blaise Cronin, Debora Shaw & Kathryn La Barre. (2003) A cast of thousands: Coauthorship and subauthorship collaboration in the 20th century as manifested in the scholarly journal literature of psychology and philosophy. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 54:9, pages 855-871.
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Richard L Hart. (2000) Co-authorship in the academic library literature: A survey of attitudes and behaviors. The Journal of Academic Librarianship 26:5, pages 339-345.
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