The research core of the knowledge management literature

  • Authors:
  • Danny P. Wallace;Connie Van Fleet;Lacey J. Downs

  • Affiliations:
  • School of Library and Information Studies, University of Alabama, 501 Gorgas Library, Box 870252, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-0252, United States;School of Library and Information Studies, University of Oklahoma, 401 West Brooks, Room 120, Norman, OK 73019-6032, United States;Oklahoma Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, 300N.E. 18th Street, Oklahoma City, OK 73013, United States

  • Venue:
  • International Journal of Information Management: The Journal for Information Professionals
  • Year:
  • 2011

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Abstract

A bibliometric analysis and a content analysis were conducted to explore the nature of the knowledge management literature. For the bibliometric analysis, three levels of Bradford analysis were used to examine the shape of the knowledge management literature based on 21,596 references from 2771 source publications. Each of the three analyses conformed to the typical curve of the Bradford distribution. For the content analysis, the texts of 630 knowledge management articles were analyzed to address the question of what research methodologies are used in the knowledge management literature. It was found that 27.8 percent of knowledge management-related articles in knowledge management journals used no identifiable research method. Of the remaining 455 refereed articles, 60 percent employed mainstream social sciences research methodologies. The remaining 40 percent of the articles using an identifiable methodology were characterized by the use of ''provisional methods'' that appeared to substitute for more formally defined or scientifically based research methodologies.