Citation analysis of dissertations of law submitted to University of Delhi, Delhi.
Burman, Joginder Singh
0. Introduction
In ancient period, there was lack of mode of communication. The
source of extensive of ideas was assembly. When judges write opinions,
they perpetually cite cases and other authorities. Lawyers, legal
scholars and judges all pepper their writings with links to earlier
sources. Citations within court decision are nothing but arguments
themselves and shows the decision of case. Analysis of the citations
employed by Legal writers offers similar promise as a tool for
exploration of legal thought. (Widdison, 2002). Yet, Bibliometrics,
Citation Indexing, Citation Analysis all appear to have been practiced
in the legal field long before they were introduced into scientific
literature. Therefore, when two Judges who are deciding different cases,
cite some of the same authorities, this does mean that those cases are,
at least somehow, relevant to each other (Smith, 2007).
Citation Analysis is the applied research method by librarians,
teachers and information scientist to indicate the relationship that
exist between cited and citing document. Martyn (1975) says, "a
Citation implies the relationship between a part or whole of the cited
document or the whole of the citing documents ".Thus, Citation
analysis is useful for understanding subject relationships, authors
effectiveness, publication trends and so on. It looks at citations to
and from documents. If, there is a citation between two documents, there
is some kind of relationship between these texts. This relationship can
be further explored and used to learn more about the characteristics of
the connected documents. (Feather and Sturges, 2003). The present study
focused at deriving qualitative and quantitative analysis based on the
citations collected from the end of the dissertations submitted in 2006
by the students of LLM, University of Delhi, Delhi.
2. Objectives: The study intends to identify the following
objectives:
1. Form-wise distribution of documents cited by LLM Students.
2. Ranking List of the Journals.
3. Author-ship Pattern in citations.
4. Country-wise distribution of the journals.
5. Subject-wise distribution of the journals.
6. Year-wise distribution of Periodical literature.
3. Methodology: A total 3052 citations have been collected from
Thirty Three dissertations available in the Campus Law Centre Library,
University of Delhi, Delhi. The citations appended to each dissertation
under the study were collected using a predefined 5" x 3"
slips.
4. Data Analysis and Interpretation
Data collected from the source dissertations have been classified,
tabulated and analyzed in accordance with the set objectives of the
study. Only data belonging to the periodicals have been analyzed in
depth.
Table-1 shows that out of 3052 total citations, 779 (25.52%)
documents were in the form of Journal articles followed by Books i.e.
678 (22.21%) with a slightly difference. It is clearly revealed that
around 50% information needs of LLM students are met by periodicals and
books only. Constitutions /Statutes / Acts comes at the third with 499
(16.34%) citations followed by Reports, Web-sites, Reviews and
Conventions / Conferences documents accounts to 9.27%, 8.42%, 8.02% and
6.09% respectively. 15 publications could not be identified as they were
not expressed properly. The rest documents has been given in the Fig. 1.
A total of 52 Journals have been identified in Tabel-2 in the field
of Law. For each Journal title listed in the ranked list rank number,
numbers of citations, cumulating percentage, etc. are given. These
Journals are ranked in the ascending order based on the number of
citations. It shows that the literature used by the researchers in the
field of Law has been scattered in 52 core Journals with 637 (81.77%)
citations and remaining 87 Journals account for 142 (18.22%) citations
have been cited less than 5 times. It was observed that Economic
Political Weekly (EPW) ranked at the top having 56(7.19%) citations
followed by American Journal of International Law with 44 (5.65%)
citations of the total. More than half of the total citations i.e.
390(50.06%) covers first 17 core Journals. This rank list will be useful
to the librarian as well as the researcher in ascertaining the most
important journals in the field of Law.
Table 3 indicates the authorship pattern reflected in periodical
articles. It was observed that single author articles contributed 622
(79.84%) citations in the field of Law followed by two and three authors
contributions with 127 (16.30%) and 17 (2.18%) respectively. The
remaining 05(0.64%) articles were contributed by more than four authors.
Table-4 tells that the research scholars of law have cited the
periodical from 10 countries in their research. Majority of the cited
periodicals belongs to the three countries and out of these USA is at
the top with 57(41%) periodicals followed by India with 52 (37.41%) and
UK with 17(12.23%) periodical. Less than 10% periodicals were from other
seven countries. This revealed that LLM students of University of Delhi,
Delhi do not use only Indian periodicals but foreign periodicals also to
a larger extent.
Table 5 shows that 97 (69.78%) periodical cited by LLM students are
from their own field i.e. Law followed by Science and Technology with
15(10.79%). They also cited periodicals from the field of Social
Science, Economics and Education with 13 (9.35%), 11 (7.9%) and 3(2.15%)
each respectively.
[FIGURE 5 OMITTED]
Year-wise distribution of cited periodical literature reveals that
about 31.45% papers were cited within 5 years of their publication and
more than 75.73% of the papers were cited within 20 years. However, the
oldest cited paper was published more than 80 years back. For
calculating the half-life of law literature depicted by the current
study, a graph was plotted by taking period on x-axis and the cumulative
number of citations of the periodical literature on y-axis. The total
number of citations measured at y-axis was 779. Half of the total
citations i.e. 390(considering each citation as an indivisible unit)
meet at point 'A' parallel on y-axis. A line drawn from point
'A' parallel to x-axis cuts the curved graph at point
'B' parallel to y-axis meets the x-axis at point
'C'. Again another line was drawn from point 'B'.
Distance from point 'A' to 'B' or 'O' to
'C' is the half life of periodical literature in field of law
which was 11 years. Fig. 5 shows obsolescence of periodical literature.
5. CONCLUSION AND FINDINGS
Citation analysis is useful for understanding subject
relationships, author effectiveness, publication trends and so on. It is
essential for a librarian to identify the information needs and use
pattern of the users. The following are some important findings of the
study:
1. Journals articles were the major source of information used by
LLM students as 1/3 of the total citations were from journal articles
i.e. 779 (25.52%) followed by books 678 (22.21%) with a slightly
difference.
2. Indian Journal titled Economic Political Weekly (EPW) with
56(7.19%) citations was the most used journal.
3. 97(69.78%) periodicals were from their own subject i.e. Law.
4. 622 (79.84%) citations were produced under single authorship.
5. A large number of total cited periodical were from U.S.A with
57(41%) citations.
6. The half-life of periodical literature in the field of Law was
11 years.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
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Dr. Joginder Singh Burman
Asstt. Professor.
Deptt. of Lib. & Inf. Sc.
K.U. Kurukshetra-136119
Haryana (INDIA)
&
Sheela, M. Phil. Student
DLISc.KUK.
Table-1. Form-wise distribution of the documents
Sr. Forms of Documents No. of % age Cumulative
No. Citations
No. of %age
Citations
1 Journals 779 25.52 779 25.52
2 Text Books 678 22.21 1457 47.73
3 Constitutions/ 499 16.34 1956 64.08
Statutes/Acts
4 Reports 283 9.27 2239 73.36
5 Web-sites 257 8.42 2496 81.78
6 Reviews 245 8.02 2741 89.81
7 Conventions/ 186 6.09 2927 95.90
Conferences
8 Reference Books 67 2.19 2994 98.1
9 Newspapers 27 0.88 3021 98.98
10 Magazines 16 0.52 3027 99.50
11 Not identified 15 0.49 3052 100
Total 3052 100 100 100
Table-2. Rank List of Journals
Sr. Journal Title Ranks
No.
1 Economic Political Weekly 1
2 American Journal of International Law 2
3 CBI Bulletin 3
4 Delhi Law review 4
5 Indian Journal of International Law 5
6 Journal of Indian Law Institute 5
7 Indian Bar Review 6
8 Journal of International Economic Law 7
9 Journal of World Trade 7
10 International Comparative Law Quarterly 7
11 Supreme Court Cases 7
12 Journal of Intellectual Property Right 7
13 National Capital Law Journal 8
14 All India Report 8
15 European Journal of International Law 8
16 Criminal Law Journal 9
17 Harvard International Law Journal 9
18 Indian Journal of Public Administration 9
19 Centre India Law Quarterly 9
20 Indian Socio-Legal Journal 10
21 International Migration Review 10
22 Journal of Intellectual Property Rights 10
23 Supreme Court Yearly Digest 10
24 American Political Science Review 11
25 Cochin University Law Review 11
26 Journal of World Intellectual Property 11
27 Fordham International Law Journal 11
28 Denver Journal of International Law and Policy 11
29 Labor Law Reporter 11
30 Virginia Journal of International Law 12
31 Company Law Journal 12
32 Chicago Journal of International Law 12
33 Cardozo Journal of International and Comparative Law 12
34 Indian Police Journal 12
35 Annual Survey of Indian Law 12
36 Journal of International Arbitration 13
37 Kashmir University Law Review 13
38 Murdoch University Electronic Journal Law 13
39 Maharishi Dayanand University of Law Journal 13
40 European Intellectual Property Law Review 13
41 Supreme Court Journal 13
42 Labour and Industrial Cases 14
43 World Intellectual Property Journal 14
44 Allahabad Weekly Report Bulletin 14
45 Andhra Law Times 14
46 All India High Court Cases 14
47 Amity Law Review 14
48 Academic Law Review 14
49 Bangalore Law Journal 14
50 Africa Law Journal 14
51 Canadian Bar Review 14
52 Cornell International Law Journal 14
Remaining 87 titles cited less than 5
times i.e.1=42, 2 =64, 3=36, 4=0
Sr. No. of % age Cumulative
No. Citations
No. of
Citations % age
1 56 7.19 56 7.19
2 44 5.65 100 12.84
3 35 4.24 133 17.07
4 29 3.72 162 20.80
5 22 2.82 184 23.62
6 22 2.82 206 26.44
7 21 2.70 227 26.57
8 17 2.18 244 31.32
9 17 2.18 261 33.50
10 17 2.18 278 35.69
11 17 2.18 295 37.87
12 17 2.18 312 40.05
13 16 2.05 328 42.11
14 16 2.05 344 44.16
15 16 2.05 360 46.21
16 15 1.93 375 48.14
17 15 1.93 390 50.06
18 15 1.93 405 51.99
19 15 1.93 420 53.92
20 9 1.16 429 55.07
21 9 1.16 438 56.23
22 9 1.16 447 57.38
23 9 1.16 456 58.54
24 8 1.03 464 59.56
25 8 1.03 472 60.59
26 8 1.03 480 61.62
27 8 1.03 488 62.64
28 8 1.03 496 63.67
29 8 1.03 504 64.70
30 7 0.90 511 65.60
31 7 0.90 518 66.50
32 7 0.90 525 67.39
33 7 0.90 532 68.29
34 7 0.90 539 69.19
35 7 0.90 546 70.09
36 6 0.77 552 70.86
37 6 0.77 558 71.63
38 6 0.77 564 72.40
39 6 0.77 570 73.17
40 6 0.77 576 73.94
41 6 0.77 582 74.71
42 5 0.64 587 75.35
43 5 0.64 592 75.99
44 5 0.64 597 76.64
45 5 0.64 602 77.28
46 5 0.64 607 77.92
47 5 0.64 612 78.56
48 5 0.64 617 79.20
49 5 0.64 622 79.85
50 5 0.64 627 80.49
51 5 0.64 632 81.13
52 5 0.64 637 81.77
142 18.22 779 100%
Table 3. Author-ship Pattern
Sr. No. of Authors No. of %age Cumulative
No. Citations
No. of
Citations % age
1 Single Author 622 79.84 622 79.84
2 Two Authors 127 16.30 749 96.14
3 Three Authors 17 2.18 766 98.33
4 Four Authors 8 1.02 774 99.35
5 More than Four 5 0.64 779 100%
Authors
Total 779 100% 779 100%
Table 4. Country-wise distribution of periodicals
Sr. Country-wise No. of % age Cumulative
No. distribution Periodicals
No. of % age
Periodicals
1. USA 57 41.00 57 41.00
2. India 52 37.41 109 78.41
3. UK 17 12.23 126 90.65
4 Australia 03 2.15 129 92.80
5 New-York 03 2.15 132 94.95
6 Russia 02 1.43 134 96.40
7 Africa 02 1.43 136 97.85
8 Canada 01 0.71 137 98.56
9 France 01 0.71 138 99.27
10 East Timor 01 0.71 139 100%
Total 139 100% 139 100%
Table 5. Subject-wise distribution of Periodicals
Sr. Subject No. of % age Cumulative
No. Periodicals
Citations % age
1 Law 97 69.8 97 69.8
2 Science and 15 10.8 112 80.6
Technology
3 Social Science 13 9.35 125 89.95
4 Economic 11 8.00 136 97.85
5 Education 3 2.15 139 100%
Total 139 100 779 100%
Table 6. Year-wise distribution of the periodical literature
Sr. Period No. of % age Cumulative
No. Intervals Citations
(in years) No. of % age
Citations
1 0-5 245 31.45 245 31.45
2 06-10 133 17.07 378 48.52
3 11-20 113 14.50 491 63.02
4 21-30 99 12.70 590 75.73
5 31-40 85 10.91 675 86.64
6 41-50 56 7.18 731 93.83
7 51-60 21 2.69 752 96.53
8 61 and earlier 27 3.46 779 100
Fig.-1
% age
Journals 25.52
Text Books 22.21
Constitutions/Statutes/Acts 16.34
Reports 9.27
Web-Sites 8.42
Reviews 8.02
Conventions/Conferences 6.09
Reference Books 2.19
News-Papers 0.88
Magazines 0.49
Not identified 0.52
Note: Table made from pie chart.
Fig. 2
% age
Single Author 79.84
Two Authors 16.3
Three Authors 2.18
Four Authors 0.64
More than Four 1.02
Note: Table made from pie chart.
Fig. 3
USA 41
India 37.41
UK 12.23
Australia 2.15
New-York 2.15
Russia 1.43
Africa 1.43
Canada 0.71
France 0.71
East Timor 0.71
Note: Table made from pie chart.
Fig. 4
% age
Law 69.8
Science & Tech 10.8
Social Science 9.35
Economic 8
Education 2.15
Note: Table made from pie chart.