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Autores principales: Chen, Yanbing, Nelson, Jonathan, Zhou, Bing, Zhou, Ryan Zhenqi, Ye, Shan, Liu, Haokun, Gu, Zhining, Kar, Armita, Kwon, Hoeyun, Chen, Pengyu, Sun, Maoran, Kang, Yuhao
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2025
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.09043
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author Chen, Yanbing
Nelson, Jonathan
Zhou, Bing
Zhou, Ryan Zhenqi
Ye, Shan
Liu, Haokun
Gu, Zhining
Kar, Armita
Kwon, Hoeyun
Chen, Pengyu
Sun, Maoran
Kang, Yuhao
author_facet Chen, Yanbing
Nelson, Jonathan
Zhou, Bing
Zhou, Ryan Zhenqi
Ye, Shan
Liu, Haokun
Gu, Zhining
Kar, Armita
Kwon, Hoeyun
Chen, Pengyu
Sun, Maoran
Kang, Yuhao
contents Academia is profoundly influenced by faculty hiring networks, which serve as critical conduits for knowledge dissemination and the formation of collaborative research initiatives. While extensive research in various disciplines has revealed the institutional hierarchies inherent in these networks, their impacts within GIScience remain underexplored. To fill this gap, this study analyzes the placement patterns of 946 GIScience faculty worldwide by mapping the connections between PhD-granting institutions and current faculty affiliations. Our dataset, which is compiled from volunteer-contributed information, is the most comprehensive collection available in this field. While there may be some limitations in its representativeness, its scope and depth provide a unique and valuable perspective on the global placement patterns of GIScience faculty. Our analysis reveals several influential programs in placing GIScience faculty, with hiring concentrated in the western countries. We examined the diversity index to assess the representation of regions and institutions within the global GIScience faculty network. We observe significant internal retention at both the continental and country levels, and a high level of non-self-hired ratio at the institutional level. Over time, research themes have also evolved, with growing research clusters emphasis on spatial data analytics, cartography and geovisualization, geocomputation, and environmental sciences, etc. These results illuminate the influence of hiring practices on global knowledge dissemination and contribute to promoting academic equity within GIScience and Geography.
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publishDate 2025
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spellingShingle Where are GIScience Faculty Hired from? Analyzing Faculty Mobility and Research Themes Through Hiring Networks
Chen, Yanbing
Nelson, Jonathan
Zhou, Bing
Zhou, Ryan Zhenqi
Ye, Shan
Liu, Haokun
Gu, Zhining
Kar, Armita
Kwon, Hoeyun
Chen, Pengyu
Sun, Maoran
Kang, Yuhao
Human-Computer Interaction
Computers and Society
Social and Information Networks
Academia is profoundly influenced by faculty hiring networks, which serve as critical conduits for knowledge dissemination and the formation of collaborative research initiatives. While extensive research in various disciplines has revealed the institutional hierarchies inherent in these networks, their impacts within GIScience remain underexplored. To fill this gap, this study analyzes the placement patterns of 946 GIScience faculty worldwide by mapping the connections between PhD-granting institutions and current faculty affiliations. Our dataset, which is compiled from volunteer-contributed information, is the most comprehensive collection available in this field. While there may be some limitations in its representativeness, its scope and depth provide a unique and valuable perspective on the global placement patterns of GIScience faculty. Our analysis reveals several influential programs in placing GIScience faculty, with hiring concentrated in the western countries. We examined the diversity index to assess the representation of regions and institutions within the global GIScience faculty network. We observe significant internal retention at both the continental and country levels, and a high level of non-self-hired ratio at the institutional level. Over time, research themes have also evolved, with growing research clusters emphasis on spatial data analytics, cartography and geovisualization, geocomputation, and environmental sciences, etc. These results illuminate the influence of hiring practices on global knowledge dissemination and contribute to promoting academic equity within GIScience and Geography.
title Where are GIScience Faculty Hired from? Analyzing Faculty Mobility and Research Themes Through Hiring Networks
topic Human-Computer Interaction
Computers and Society
Social and Information Networks
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.09043