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Do they practice what they preach? The presence of problematic citations in business ethics research

Alexander Serenko (Faculty of Business and IT, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Oshawa, Canada)
John Dumay (Department of Accounting and Corporate Governance, Macquarie Business School, Sydney, Australia) (Department of Management, University of Bologna, Forli, Italy) (Center for Corporate Reporting, Finance and Tax, Nyenrode Business Universiteit, Nyenrode, The Netherlands) (Department of Business and Management, Aalborg Universitet, Aalborg, Denmark)
Pei-Chi Kelly Hsiao (Waikato Management School, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand)
Chun Wei Choo (Faculty of Information, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada)

Journal of Documentation

ISSN: 0022-0418

Article publication date: 18 June 2021

Issue publication date: 11 October 2021

381

Abstract

Purpose

In scholarly publications, citations play an essential epistemic role in creating and disseminating knowledge. Conversely, the use of problematic citations impedes the growth of knowledge, contaminates the knowledge base and disserves science. This study investigates the presence of problematic citations in the works of business ethics scholars.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors investigated two types of problematic citations: inaccurate citations and plagiarized citations. For this, 1,200 randomly selected citations from three leading business ethics journals were assessed based on: (1) referenced journal errors, (2) article title errors and (3) author name errors. Other papers that replicated the same title errors were identified.

Findings

Of the citations in the examined business ethics journals, 21.42% have at least one error. Of particular concern are the citation errors in article titles, where 3.75% of examined citations have minor errors and another 3.75% display major errors – 7.5% in total. Two-thirds of minor and major title errors were repeatedly replicated in previous and ensuing publications, which confirms the presence of citation plagiarism. An average article published in a business ethics journal contains at least three plagiarized citations. Even though business ethics fares well compared to other disciplines, a situation where every fifth citation is problematic is unacceptable.

Practical implications

Business ethics scholars are not immune to the use of problematic citations, and it is unlikely that attempting to improve researchers' awareness of the unethicality of this behavior will bring a desirable outcome.

Originality/value

Identifying that problematic citations exist in the business ethics literature is novel because it is expected that these researchers would not condone this practice.

Keywords

Citation

Serenko, A., Dumay, J., Hsiao, P.-C.K. and Choo, C.W. (2021), "Do they practice what they preach? The presence of problematic citations in business ethics research", Journal of Documentation, Vol. 77 No. 6, pp. 1304-1320. https://doi.org/10.1108/JD-01-2021-0018

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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