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  • Autor
    • Zyoud, SH. H.
    • Fuchs-Hanusch, D.
    • Zyoud, S. H.
    • Al-Rawajfeh, A. E.
    • Shaheen, H. Q.
  • TitelA bibliometric-based evaluation on environmental research in the Arab world
  • Datei
  • DOI10.1007/s13762-016-1180-3
  • Persistent Identifier
  • Erschienen inInternational Journal of Environmental Science and Technology
  • Band14
  • Erscheinungsjahr2017
  • Heft4
  • Seiten689-706
  • ISSN1735-2630
  • ZugriffsrechteCC-BY
  • Download Statistik1463
  • Peer ReviewJa
  • AbstractThe Arab world's environment is among the most vulnerable and harsh ones across the globe. This entails much efforts to mitigate the potential environmental risks. Analysing contributions of Arab scholars in environmental research in terms of quantity and quality can bring up insights on their endeavours in this regard. Bibliometric techniques are proposed to conduct such this analysis over publications originated from Arab world in a leading environmental journal ``Science of the Total Environment''. Research productivity is being used as quantitative indicator, while citation rates and Hirsch index (h-index) are being used as qualitative indicators. The research outputs were compared with those obtained from non-Arab Middle Eastern countries (Iran, Turkey and Israel). Worldwide research productivity was 17,258 documents, while that from Arab countries, Iran, Turkey and Israel were 215, 34, 83 and 87 documents, respectively. The h-index of Arab world research was 31, and total citations were 3616 with an average of 16.8. The highest share of publications was recorded by Saudi Arabia (53 documents; 24.7%). Egypt and Saudi Arabia had highest h-index with 15 for each one. American University of Beirut in Lebanon was the highest productive institution (16; 7.4%). The most collaborated country with Arab world was France (29; 13.5%). In the conclusion, the study reveals a clear gap in terms of research productivity between Arab countries and other Middle Eastern countries, precisely Israel and Turkey. More research efforts through optimizing investments in environmental research, developing regional experiences and fostering international collaboration are required to eliminate these lags.