The growing importance of academic journals' Impact Factor (IF) is reshaping the research arena. In this paper we discuss the possible impact of the IF on tourism research and on key players such as editors of top-tier tourism journals, students, researchers as well as directors of tourism academic units. It also examines the impact on the public whose funds make up part of scholars' salaries and, to some extent, research grants. It is argued here that by encouraging researchers to target only journals with a high IF, research may come to a standstill, as exploratory, industry-related or critical studies may cease being conducted and published. This is a call to minimize the reliance on the IF and its glorification as an indicator of resear...
The paper analyses the leading international journals in Tourism and Hospitality Research using quan...
In this editorial, we reflect on how the Journal of Sustainable Tourism can contribute towards susta...
The impact factor (IF) of an journal is a measure reflecting the average number of citations to rece...
The exceedingly competitive climate of academia has increased the emphasis on performance-based rese...
The need to demonstrate the value of research to non-academic audiences is an increasingly prominent...
The paper analyses the leading international journals in Tourism and Hospitality Research using quan...
In spite of the increasing emphasis on the quality of publications in academia, there exists no stan...
During long time academy pondered the productivity of authors as criterion of distinction, but this...
In spite of the consensus on the importance of research and its close relationship to academic promo...
A journal’s “impact factor” (IF) is the bibliometric index that reflects the frequency with which an...
The academia-tourism industry research/collaboration gap continues with the tourism industry seeing ...
The paper analyses the leading international journals in Tourism and Hospitality Research using quan...
The starting point of our paper (Thomas & Ormerod, 2017) was to assess the extent to which academic ...
[Extract] Executive Summary. \ud The number of tourism Academics worldwide has grown substantially, ...
Emphasis on research quantity over quality in the modern corporatised university disincentivises min...
The paper analyses the leading international journals in Tourism and Hospitality Research using quan...
In this editorial, we reflect on how the Journal of Sustainable Tourism can contribute towards susta...
The impact factor (IF) of an journal is a measure reflecting the average number of citations to rece...
The exceedingly competitive climate of academia has increased the emphasis on performance-based rese...
The need to demonstrate the value of research to non-academic audiences is an increasingly prominent...
The paper analyses the leading international journals in Tourism and Hospitality Research using quan...
In spite of the increasing emphasis on the quality of publications in academia, there exists no stan...
During long time academy pondered the productivity of authors as criterion of distinction, but this...
In spite of the consensus on the importance of research and its close relationship to academic promo...
A journal’s “impact factor” (IF) is the bibliometric index that reflects the frequency with which an...
The academia-tourism industry research/collaboration gap continues with the tourism industry seeing ...
The paper analyses the leading international journals in Tourism and Hospitality Research using quan...
The starting point of our paper (Thomas & Ormerod, 2017) was to assess the extent to which academic ...
[Extract] Executive Summary. \ud The number of tourism Academics worldwide has grown substantially, ...
Emphasis on research quantity over quality in the modern corporatised university disincentivises min...
The paper analyses the leading international journals in Tourism and Hospitality Research using quan...
In this editorial, we reflect on how the Journal of Sustainable Tourism can contribute towards susta...
The impact factor (IF) of an journal is a measure reflecting the average number of citations to rece...