Collaboration in the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences in Australia

This paper reports on the first large-scale quantitative investigation into collaboration, demonstrated in co-authorship, by Australian humanities, arts and social sciences (HASS) researchers. Web of Science data were extracted for Australian HASS publications, with a focus on the softer social scie...

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Main Authors: Haddow, Gaby, Xia, Jianhong (Cecilia), Willson, Michele
Format: Journal Article
Published: National Tertiary Education Union 2017
Online Access:https://issuu.com/nteu/docs/aur_59-01
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/51791
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author Haddow, Gaby
Xia, Jianhong (Cecilia)
Willson, Michele
author_facet Haddow, Gaby
Xia, Jianhong (Cecilia)
Willson, Michele
author_sort Haddow, Gaby
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper reports on the first large-scale quantitative investigation into collaboration, demonstrated in co-authorship, by Australian humanities, arts and social sciences (HASS) researchers. Web of Science data were extracted for Australian HASS publications, with a focus on the softer social sciences, over the period 2004 – 2013. The findings show that collaboration has increased over the last ten years, with strong intra-region collaboration concentrated on the east coast of Australia. International collaboration occurred most frequently with English speaking countries at vast distances from Australia. On average, fields in the social sciences collaborated at higher rates and attracted higher citations than humanities fields, but co-authorship of any kind was likely to increase citation rates. The results provide a snapshot of collaboration by Australian HASS authors in this time period and can be used as a benchmark to explore collaboration patterns in the future.
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format Journal Article
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:49:18Z
publishDate 2017
publisher National Tertiary Education Union
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-517912017-05-15T06:44:49Z Collaboration in the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences in Australia Haddow, Gaby Xia, Jianhong (Cecilia) Willson, Michele This paper reports on the first large-scale quantitative investigation into collaboration, demonstrated in co-authorship, by Australian humanities, arts and social sciences (HASS) researchers. Web of Science data were extracted for Australian HASS publications, with a focus on the softer social sciences, over the period 2004 – 2013. The findings show that collaboration has increased over the last ten years, with strong intra-region collaboration concentrated on the east coast of Australia. International collaboration occurred most frequently with English speaking countries at vast distances from Australia. On average, fields in the social sciences collaborated at higher rates and attracted higher citations than humanities fields, but co-authorship of any kind was likely to increase citation rates. The results provide a snapshot of collaboration by Australian HASS authors in this time period and can be used as a benchmark to explore collaboration patterns in the future. 2017 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/51791 https://issuu.com/nteu/docs/aur_59-01 National Tertiary Education Union fulltext
spellingShingle Haddow, Gaby
Xia, Jianhong (Cecilia)
Willson, Michele
Collaboration in the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences in Australia
title Collaboration in the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences in Australia
title_full Collaboration in the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences in Australia
title_fullStr Collaboration in the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences in Australia
title_full_unstemmed Collaboration in the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences in Australia
title_short Collaboration in the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences in Australia
title_sort collaboration in the humanities, arts and social sciences in australia
url https://issuu.com/nteu/docs/aur_59-01
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/51791