Alexandre Truc, O. Santerre, Y. Gingras, François Claveau
{"title":"The Interdisciplinarity of Economics","authors":"Alexandre Truc, O. Santerre, Y. Gingras, François Claveau","doi":"10.2139/ssrn.3669335","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Economics has the reputation to be an insular discipline with little consideration for other social sciences and humanities (SSH). New research [Angrist et al, 2020, JEL] challenges this perception of economics: the perception would be historically inaccurate and especially at odds with the recent interdisciplinarity of economics. By systematically studying citation patterns since the 1950 in thousands of journals, we offer the best established conclusions to date on this issue. Our results do show that the discipline is uniquely insular from a historical point of view. But we also document an important turn after the 1990s that drastically transformed the discipline has it became more open, very quickly, to the influence of management, environmental sciences, and to a lesser degree, a variety of SSH. While this turn made economics less uniquely insular, as of today economics remains the least outward-looking discipline with management among all SSH. Furthermore, unlike in the other major social sciences, the most influential journals in economics have not significantly contributed to the recent increase in the interdisciplinarity of the discipline. While economics is changing, it is too soon to claim that it has completed an interdisciplinary turn.","PeriodicalId":208149,"journal":{"name":"Finance Educator: Courses","volume":"101 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-08-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"16","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Finance Educator: Courses","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3669335","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 16
Abstract
Economics has the reputation to be an insular discipline with little consideration for other social sciences and humanities (SSH). New research [Angrist et al, 2020, JEL] challenges this perception of economics: the perception would be historically inaccurate and especially at odds with the recent interdisciplinarity of economics. By systematically studying citation patterns since the 1950 in thousands of journals, we offer the best established conclusions to date on this issue. Our results do show that the discipline is uniquely insular from a historical point of view. But we also document an important turn after the 1990s that drastically transformed the discipline has it became more open, very quickly, to the influence of management, environmental sciences, and to a lesser degree, a variety of SSH. While this turn made economics less uniquely insular, as of today economics remains the least outward-looking discipline with management among all SSH. Furthermore, unlike in the other major social sciences, the most influential journals in economics have not significantly contributed to the recent increase in the interdisciplinarity of the discipline. While economics is changing, it is too soon to claim that it has completed an interdisciplinary turn.
经济学被认为是一门孤立的学科,很少考虑其他社会科学和人文科学。新的研究[Angrist et al ., 2020, JEL]挑战了对经济学的这种看法:这种看法在历史上是不准确的,特别是与最近经济学的跨学科性不一致。通过系统地研究自1950年以来数千种期刊的引文模式,我们提供了迄今为止关于这一问题的最佳确定结论。我们的结果确实表明,从历史的角度来看,这门学科是独特的孤立。但我们也记录了一个重要的转折,在20世纪90年代之后,这门学科发生了巨大的变化,它变得更加开放,非常迅速,受到管理学,环境科学的影响,以及在较小程度上,各种SSH。虽然这一转变使经济学不再那么孤立,但时至今日,经济学仍然是所有学科中最不外向型的学科。此外,与其他主要社会科学不同,经济学领域最具影响力的期刊并没有对该学科跨学科性的近期增长做出显著贡献。尽管经济学正在发生变化,但现在断言它已经完成了跨学科的转变还为时过早。