编辑

IF 2.6 3区 管理学 Q2 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR
G. Meardi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在《欧洲劳资关系杂志》,我们一直关注2019冠状病毒病大流行对研究和出版的影响。首先,我们监控了对提交流程可能产生的影响。总的来说,与2019年相比,2020年向EJIR提交的申请增加了26%。与前一年相比,第二季度和第四季度的增长速度相对较慢,而当时的卫生限制措施最为严格。由于我们审稿人的承诺,该杂志的工作迄今进展顺利,我们已经(以“在线第一”的名义)在大流行开始后提交了一些优秀的文章。第二,我们关注可能出现的不平等现象,特别是考虑到照顾职责的不平等分工以及在家工作和学校关闭可能产生的不同影响,在性别方面尤其如此。在缺乏性别自我声明数据的情况下,我们研究了第一作者名字的近似二元指标(一些关于性别和出版物的研究更喜欢看最后一位作者的性别,但在我们的领域,第一作者似乎更有代表性)。女性第一作者在2020年投稿总量中所占的比例为36.3%,略高于往年的平均水平,但在第二季度和第四季度有所下降(分别为23.8%和29.4%)。观测的数量太少,无法证实任何重要的趋势。然而,在生命科学领域,女性撰写的论文数量有所下降(Ribarovska等人,2021年),因此,必须继续监测这种情况,以防这种持续大流行病的滞后影响。与此同时,EJIR热衷于鼓励有爱心的作者,并向他们保证,如果需要建议、延长重新提交的时间或对其提交的内容进行具体编辑,请毫不犹豫地与编辑联系。EJIR的另一个具体问题是卫生紧急情况对质量比较研究的影响,这历来是该杂志的一个重要内容。研究人员在开发新方法、调整传统方法、调查远程工作的兴起和工作数字化的进展方面展示了主动性和企业家精神。一如既往地在工作研究中,我们不能让数据可用性的考虑成为一个借口,忘记那些不太明显,但对当今社会和经济同样重要或不那么重要的部门、工作和任务。正如本期关于局外人的四篇文章所表明的那样,劳资关系研究需要具有“包容性”,尤其是在这种时候。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editorial
At the European Journal of Industrial Relations (EJIR), we have been concerned with the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic on research and publication. First, we have monitored possible effects on the flow of submissions. In total, during 2020, submissions to the EJIR have increased compared to 2019 (+26 percent). They have been, in comparison to the previous year, relatively slower in the second and fourth quarters, when healthemergency restrictions were highest. Thanks to the commitment of our reviewers, the journal’s work has proceeded smoothly so far, and we already have (as ‘OnlineFirst’) some excellent articles that were submitted after the start of the pandemic. Second, we are concerned with possible inequalities, in particular with regard to gender given the unequal division of care duties and the possible different effects of work-fromhome and of school closures. In the absence of gender self-declaration data, we looked at the approximate, binary indicator of the first author’s first name (some studies on gender and publications prefer to look at the gender of the last author, but in our field the first author seems more representative). The share of female first authors on the total submissions of 2020 has been, at 36.3 percent, slightly above the average of previous years, but it was lower in the second and fourth quarters (23.8 and 29.4 percent, respectively). The number of observations is too small to confirm any significant trend. Yet, a decline in female-authored submissions has been registered in the life sciences (Ribarovska et al., 2021) and it is therefore important to keep monitoring the situation in case of lagged effects of the enduring pandemic. In the meanwhile, the EJIR is keen to encourage authors with caring duties and reassure them not to hesitate to contact the editor if in need of advice, extensions on resubmissions or specific editing for their submissions. A further specific issue for the EJIR concerns the implications of the health emergency for qualitative comparative research, which has traditionally constituted a strong stream in the journal. Researchers are demonstrating initiative and entrepreneurship in developing new methods, adapting the traditional ones, and investigating the rise of remote working and the advances of work digitalization. As always in the study of work, we cannot let data availability considerations become an excuse for forgetting those sectors, jobs and tasks that are less visible, but no less essential or less critical for today’s society and economy. As four articles on the topic of outsiders show in this issue, industrial relations research needs to be ‘inclusive’, especially at times like this.
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来源期刊
European Journal of Industrial Relations
European Journal of Industrial Relations INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR-
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
11.50%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: It embraces a broad definition of industrial relations and includes articles which relate to any aspect of work and employment. It publishes rigorous and innovative work on and from all European countries, from the Atlantic to the Urals. All social science disciplines are relevant to its remit, and interdisciplinary approaches are particulary encouraged. A major objective is to foster cross-national comparative analysis; and in this context, work which relates European developments to broader global experience is welcome.
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