Journal article
The state of social science research on antimicrobial resistance
Snorre Sylvester Frid-Nielsen, Olivier Rubin, Erik Baekkeskov
Social Science and Medicine | Elsevier | Published : 2019
Abstract
This paper investigates the genealogy of social science research into antimicrobial resistance (AMR) by piecing together the bibliometric characteristics of this branch of research. Drawing on the Web of Science as the primary database, the analysis shows that while academic interest in AMR has increased substantially over the last few years, social science research continues to constitute a negligible share of total academic contributions. More in-depth network analysis of citations and bibliometric couplings suggests how the impact of social science research on the scientific discourse on AMR is both peripheral and spread thin. We conclude that this limited social science engagement is puz..
View full abstractRelated Projects (1)
Grants
Awarded by Independent Research Fund Denmark
Funding Acknowledgements
The Independent Research Fund Denmark funded this research under the project "Exploring the policy dynamics of global antimicrobial resistance initiatives" 2018-2022 (project number: 8019-00005A).