Analysis of Pacific Rim Property Research Journal Performance

Author/s: Graeme Newell

Date Published: 1/03/2003

Published in: Volume 9 - 2003 Issue 1 (pages 3 - 12)

Abstract

The Pacific Rim Property Research Journal (PRPRJ) is the official journal of the Pacific Rim Real Estate Society (PRRES) and represents the major refereed property research journal in the region. Published quarterly, PRPRJ has an international editorial board and attracts a wide range of property research papers from the Pacific Rim and internationally. This paper will analyse the papers submitted to PRPRJ over 2001-02 to assess a range of key journal quality issues, including the quality of the refereeing process, publication acceptance rates, publication turn-around times, diversity of property research topics published and major contributing universities.

Download Full Article

Download the Full Article PDF

14445921.2003.11104133.pdf 14445921.2003.11104133.pdf (134kB)

Keywords

Acceptance Rates - Author Analysis - Editorial Board - Prprj - Publication Turn-Around Times - Refereeing - Topic Analysis

References

  • Albert, J. and P. Chandy. 1986. Research and publishing in real estate: a survey and analysis. Akron Business and Economics Review 17(4): 46-53.
  • Chau, K.W. 1998. Real estate research in Asia-past, present and future. Journal of the Asian Real Estate Society 1(1): 1-16.
  • Chung, K. and P. Kolbe. 1991. Empirical regularities in the market for real estate research output. Journal of Real Estate Research 7(1): 115-124.
  • Clauretie, T. and N. Daneshvary. 1993. A note on the ranking of real estate authors. Journal of Real Estate Research 8(3): 445-453.
  • Diaz, J., Black, R. and J. Rabianski. 1993. A note on ranking real estate journals. Real Estate Economics 24(4): 551-563.
  • Dombrow, J. and G. Turnbull. 2000. Individual and institutional contributors to the Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics: 1988-99. Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics 21(2): 203-214.
  • Dombrow, J. and G. Turnbull. 2002. Individuals and institutions publishing research in real estate: 1989-1998. Journal of Real Estate Literature 10(1): 45-92.
  • Gibler, K. and A. Ziobrowski. 2002. Authors’ perceptions and preferences among real estate journals. Real Estate Economics 30(1): 137-157.
  • Judd, D. 1996. The Journal of Real Estate Research: a ten year review. Journal of Real Estate Research 12(2): 249-313.
  • Newell, G., Acheampong, P., Juchau, R., Chau, K.W. and J. Webb. 2002. An international analysis of real estate journals. Journal of Property Investment and Finance 20(6): 454-472.
  • Ong, S.E., Ooi, J. and N. H. Wong. 2001. Crossing the great divide? A survey of US and UK real estate journals. Journal of Property Investment and Finance 19(6): 519-534.
  • Redman, A., Manakyan, H. and J. Tanner. 1999. A normalised citation analysis of real estate journals. Real Estate Economics 27(1): 169-182.
  • Sa-Aadu, J. and J. Shilling. 1988. Ranking of contributing authors to the AREUEA journal by doctoral origin and employer: 1973-87. AREUEA Journal 16(3): 257-270.
  • Smith, C. and G. Greenwade. 1987. The ranking of real estate publications and tenure requirements at AACSB versus non-AACSB schools. Journal of Real Estate Research 2(2): 105-112.
  • Webb, J. and J. Albert. 1995. Evaluating the real estate journals: the mainstream finance perspective. Journal of Real Estate Research 10(2): 217-226.
  • Ziobrowski, A. and K. Gibler. 2000. Factors academic real estate authors consider when choosing where to submit a manuscript for publication. Journal of Real Estate Practice and Education 3(1): 43-54.