Before you decide where to publish your research it is helpful to find out which journals are highly ranked in their area and how these rankings have been made.
Journal evaluation tool using citation data drawn from over 11,000 scholarly and technical journals worldwide. It is the only source of citation data on journals, covering science, technology, and the social sciences.
2021 Association of Business Schools guide to the range, subject matter and relative quality of journals in which business and management and economics academics might publish the results of their research
CiteScore uses citation data from Scopus to rank journals based on the number of citations received by a journal in one year to documents published in the three previous years, divided by the number of documents indexed in Scopus published in those same three years. CiteScore provides a ‘normalised’ percentile ranking to indicate the relative standing of a journal in its subject field. It also includes the SJR (SCImago Journal Rank) and SNIP (Source Normalised Impact per Paper) numbers.
Compiled by Anne-Wil Harzing, this is a collation of journal rankings from a variety of sources. The list comprises academic journals in the following broad areas: Economics, Finance, Accounting, Management, and Marketing.
The Eigenfactor score provides a measure of journal importance. These scores can be found either via eigenfactor.org or as one of the measures within the JCR (Journal Citations Report).
Portal that includes the journals and country scientific indicators developed from the information contained in the Scopus® database (Elsevier B.V.). These indicators can be used to assess and analyze scientific domains.