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.
Comments
Post a Comment