Journal of Public Policy and Marketing explained

Journal of Public Policy & Marketing
Cover:-->
Former Names:Journal of Marketing & Public Policy; Public Policy Issues in Marketing
Former Names:-->
Abbreviation:J. Public Policy Mark.
Discipline:Marketing
Language:English
Editor:Kelly D. Martin and Maura L. Scott
Publisher:American Marketing Association
Country:United States
History:1979–present
Frequency:Quarterly
Impact:6.343
Impact-Year:2021
Issnlabel:Journal of Public Policy & Marketing
Issn:0743-9156
Eissn:1547-7207
Jstor:jpublpolimark
Lccn:84643643
Oclc:10339729
Issn2label:Journal of Marketing & Public Policy
Issn2:0748-6766
Jstor2:jmarkpublpoli
Lccn2:84649780
Oclc2:8713710
Issn3label:Public Policy Issues in Marketing
Issn3:2328-8469
Lccn3:80649443
Oclc3:6801744
Website:https://www.ama.org/journal-of-public-policy-marketing/
Link1:https://journals.sagepub.com/toc/ppoa/current
Link1-Name:Online access
Link2:https://journals.sagepub.com/loi/ppoa
Link2-Name:Online archive

Journal of Public Policy & Marketing is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by the American Marketing Association. It covers all aspects of the intersection of marketing and public policy.[1] It was originally established in 1979 as Public Policy Issues in Marketing, and renamed itself to Journal of Marketing & Public Policy 1982 for one year, before settling on the current name in 1983.[2]

Abstracting and indexing

The journal is indexed and abstracted in the following bibliographic databases:[3] According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2018 impact factor of 2.457.[4]

Awards

Since 1993, the journal annual awards the Thomas C. Kinnear award to recognize the article that makes "the most significant contribution to the understanding of marketing and public policy issues". The article must have been published in the journal within the most recent three-year period.[5]

Notable papers

According to the Scopus database in 2024,[6] the two most cited papers in are "Interventions to break and create consumer habits"[7] and "Privacy concerns and consumer willingness to provide personal information."[8]

Notes and References

  1. Wilkie. William L. . Moore . Elizabeth S. . 2003 . Scholarly Research in Marketing: Exploring the '4 Eras' of Thought Development . Journal of Public Policy & Marketing . 22 . 2. 116–46 . 10.1509/jppm.22.2.116.17639. 144828721 .
  2. Sprott. David E. . Miyazaki . Anthony D. . 2002 . Two Decades of Contributions to Marketing and Public Policy: An Analysis of Research Published in Journal of Public Policy & Marketing . Journal of Public Policy & Marketing . 21 . 1. 105–25 . 10.1509/jppm.21.1.105.17606. 154471655 .
  3. Journal of Public Policy & Marketing . 0743-9156 . 2019-08-22.
  4. Book: 2019 . Journal of Marketing Research . 2018 Journal Citation Reports . . Social Sciences . Web of Science. Journal Citation Reports .
  5. Web site: Thomas C. Kinnear/Journal of Public Policy & Marketing Award.
  6. Web site: Source details: Journal of Public Policy and Marketing . 2024-06-24 . Scopus . Elsevier.
  7. Verplanken . Bas . Wood . Wendy . 2006 . Interventions to Break and Create Consumer Habits . Journal of Public Policy & Marketing . en . 25 . 1 . 90–103 . 10.1509/jppm.25.1.90 . 0743-9156.
  8. Phelps . Joseph . Nowak . Glen . Ferrell . Elizabeth . 2000 . Privacy Concerns and Consumer Willingness to Provide Personal Information . Journal of Public Policy & Marketing . en . 19 . 1 . 27–41 . 10.1509/jppm.19.1.27.16941 . 0743-9156.