论文标题
墨西哥境内的学术迁移:使用Scopus纵向文献计量数据分析研究人员的内部迁移
Scholarly migration within Mexico: Analyzing internal migration among researchers using Scopus longitudinal bibliometric data
论文作者
论文摘要
学者的迁移是创新和知识传播的主要驱动力。尽管大规模的书目数据已用于衡量学者的国际迁移,但我们对研究人员内部迁移的理解非常有限。这部分是由于缺乏在适当的次国级别上汇总的数据。在这项研究中,我们根据Scopus数据库中的110万个作者记录分析了墨西哥的内部迁移。我们追踪墨西哥国家之间学者的运动,并提供1996 - 2018年期间内部迁移的关键人口统计指标。从方法论的角度来看,我们开发了一个新框架,以增强数据质量,从隶属关系中推断状态,并检测从模态状态的移动,以研究研究人员之间的内部迁移。实质上,我们结合了人口统计学和网络科学技术,以提高我们对国家边界内部迁移模式的理解。墨西哥州之间的迁移模式在整个地区的大小和方向上似乎是异质的。但是,尽管许多学者仍然留在其地区,但似乎偏爱墨西哥城和周围国家作为移民目的地。我们观察到,在过去的二十年中,原油迁移强度的总体下降趋势总体下降。但是,迁移网络已经变得更加密集,更加多样化,并且包括海湾和太平洋海岸各州之间的更大交流。我们的分析本质上大多是经验性的,它为可以依靠迁移学者开发的分析框架以及经过适当处理的文献计量数据的丰富性奠定了基础。
The migration of scholars is a major driver of innovation and of diffusion of knowledge. Although large-scale bibliometric data have been used to measure international migration of scholars, our understanding of internal migration among researchers is very limited. This is partly due to a lack of data aggregated at a suitable sub-national level. In this study, we analyze internal migration in Mexico based on over 1.1 million authorship records from the Scopus database. We trace the movements of scholars between Mexican states, and provide key demographic measures of internal migration for the 1996-2018 period. From a methodological perspective, we develop a new framework for enhancing data quality, inferring states from affiliations, and detecting moves from modal states for the purposes of studying internal migration among researchers. Substantively, we combine demographic and network science techniques to improve our understanding of internal migration patterns within country boundaries. The migration patterns between states in Mexico appear to be heterogeneous in size and direction across regions. However, while many scholars remain in their regions, there seems to be a preference for Mexico City and the surrounding states as migration destinations. We observed that over the past two decades, there has been a general decreasing trend in the crude migration intensity. However, the migration network has become more dense and more diverse, and has included greater exchanges between states along the Gulf and the Pacific Coast. Our analysis, which is mostly empirical in nature, lays the foundations for testing and developing theories that can rely on the analytical framework developed by migration scholars, and the richness of appropriately processed bibliometric data.