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Rhythmanalysis
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ISBN: 978-1-83909-973-1

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Publication date: 28 December 2006

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Studies in Symbolic Interaction
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ISBN: 978-0-7623-1325-9

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Publication date: 23 October 2008

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Studies in Symbolic Interaction
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ISBN: 978-1-84855-127-5

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Publication date: 25 July 2008

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Studies in Symbolic Interaction
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ISBN: 978-1-84663-931-9

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Publication date: 2 August 2006

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Community and Ecology
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ISBN: 978-1-84950-410-2

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Publication date: 24 October 2023

Rodanthi Tzanelli

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The New Spirit of Hospitality
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ISBN: 978-1-83753-161-5

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Publication date: 1 October 2018

Carsten Stage and Tina Thode Hougaard

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The Language of Illness and Death on Social Media
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ISBN: 978-1-78769-479-8

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Publication date: 13 January 2020

Sam Hillyard

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Broadlands and the New Rurality
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ISBN: 978-1-83909-581-8

Open Access
Article
Publication date: 21 September 2022

Andreas Nishikawa-Pacher

How to obtain a list of the 100 largest scientific publishers sorted by journal count? Existing databases are unhelpful as each of them inhere biased omissions and data quality…

22000

Abstract

Purpose

How to obtain a list of the 100 largest scientific publishers sorted by journal count? Existing databases are unhelpful as each of them inhere biased omissions and data quality flaws. This paper tries to fill this gap with an alternative approach.

Design/methodology/approach

The content coverages of Scopus, Publons, DOAJ and SherpaRomeo were first used to extract a preliminary list of publishers that supposedly possess at least 15 journals. Second, the publishers' websites were scraped to fetch their portfolios and, thus, their “true” journal counts.

Findings

The outcome is a list of the 100 largest publishers comprising 28.060 scholarly journals, with the largest publishing 3.763 journals, and the smallest carrying 76 titles. The usual “oligopoly” of major publishing companies leads the list, but it also contains 17 university presses from the Global South, and, surprisingly, 30 predatory publishers that together publish 4.517 journals.

Research limitations/implications

Additional data sources could be used to mitigate remaining biases; it is difficult to disambiguate publisher names and their imprints; and the dataset carries a non-uniform distribution, thus risking the omission of data points in the lower range.

Practical implications

The dataset can serve as a useful basis for comprehensive meta-scientific surveys on the publisher-level.

Originality/value

The catalogue can be deemed more inclusive and diverse than other ones because many of the publishers would have been overlooked if one had drawn from merely one or two sources. The list is freely accessible and invites regular updates. The approach used here (webscraping) has seldomly been used in meta-scientific surveys.

Details

Journal of Documentation, vol. 78 no. 7
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0022-0418

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