Bibliometrics for Library and Information Science Research of Policy Document: Insights from Dimension Database

Dublin Core

Title

Bibliometrics for Library and Information Science Research of Policy Document: Insights from Dimension Database

Subject

Library and Information Science

Description

In the identified LIS fields Human Society and Law and Legal Studies have led to higher proportions of documentation and this coverage has rapidly increased since the turn of the 21st century. On the other hand, fields like Mathematical Sciences, Psychology, Physical and Chemical Sciences have remarkably less documents published indicating lack of research attention. Although Engineering and Biological Sciences have always produced a high volume of research, they lag behind Commerce, Management and Biomedical Sciences, in writing policy. While matches in Health Sciences, Information and Computing Sciences and Library and Information Studies increase steadily and slowly, contributing to consistency compared with spikes in other fields, it signals further the increased prioritizing of disciplines specifically related to social situation and jurisprudence. At the same time, Environmental Sciences and Economics have modest growth, but are far from the explosive growth of other fields. The findings from this research emphasize the need for a more evenly balanced focus on fields that are less represented, as well as highlighting trends that reveal larger societal, technological and academic currents affecting research focus worldwide as captured in the Dimension Database.

Creator

Merina Ahmed

Publisher

RGU journal of social science and research

Date

01 October, 2025

Format

Digital

Language

English

Type

Article

Identifier

https://www.rgujournal.in/index.php/RGUJSSR/article/view/75

Geolocation

Comments

System Administrator

Very informative

Akhtar

Very Informative

Allowed tags: <p>, <a>, <em>, <strong>, <ul>, <ol>, <li>