ABDC vs Scopus

 Here’s a detailed comparison between ABDC (Australian Business Deans Council) and Scopus, presented in tabular form:



Aspect

ABDC (Australian Business Deans Council)

Scopus

Purpose

A ranking system specifically for business and management journals.

A comprehensive citation database covering a wide range of disciplines, including sciences, social sciences, arts, and humanities.

Scope

Focuses on journals relevant to business, management, and economics disciplines.

Covers journals from multiple disciplines, including business, engineering, medicine, and more.

Evaluation Criteria

Journals are classified into four tiers: A*, A, B, and C, based on quality and impact in business fields.

Includes all journals indexed in Scopus, regardless of discipline, evaluated based on citation metrics and peer-review standards.

Database Management

Managed by the Australian Business Deans Council, with periodic updates and reviews.

Managed by Elsevier, updated regularly with over 43,000 indexed journals, conference proceedings, and book series.

Inclusion Process

Journals are nominated, reviewed, and evaluated for inclusion. Criteria are specific to business and management.

Journals must meet Scopus's indexing criteria, which include editorial quality, peer review, and global relevance.

Coverage

Limited to business-related journals, approximately 2,500 journals in the latest list.

Broad coverage, with tens of thousands of sources across disciplines.

Ranking System

Assigns quality rankings (A*, A, B, C) to journals for assessing academic performance.

Does not rank journals but provides metrics like CiteScore, SJR (SCImago Journal Rank), and SNIP.

Global Recognition

Highly recognized in academic institutions, especially in Australia and New Zealand.

Globally recognized and widely used for research assessment and publication visibility.

Use Case

Used by researchers and institutions for journal selection in business and management disciplines.

Used by researchers in all disciplines for finding and evaluating journals and research articles.

Limitations

Limited to business-related fields; less useful for interdisciplinary research.

Covers a broad range of fields but lacks specific ranking for business journals like ABDC.


Conclusion:

  • ABDC: Best for evaluating business and management journals based on quality tiers.
  • Scopus: Ideal for interdisciplinary research and accessing a wide variety of indexed sources across domains.

Both serve different purposes and are complementary depending on the researcher's focus area.

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