What specific areas do we cover?
This discussion is a work-in-progress
Our initial focus is quantitative work that informs , especially in economics, policy, and social science, informing our .
We give a data presentation of the work we have already covered and the work we are prioritizing , which will be continually updated.
But what does this mean in practice? What specific research fields, topics, and approaches are we likely to classify as 'relevant to evaluate'?
We give some lists and annotated examples below.
Fields, methods, and approaches
As of January 2024 The Unjournal focuses on ...
Research where the fundamental question being investigated involves human behavior and beliefs and the consequences of these. This may involve markets, production processes, economic constraints, social interactions, technology, the 'market of ideas', individual psychology, government processes, and more. However, the main research question should not revolve around issues outside of human behavior, such as physical science, biology, or computer science and engineering. These areas are out of our scope (at least for now).
Research that is fundamentally quantitative and uses
This to generally involves the academic fields:
Applied Statistics (and some other applied math)
These discipline/field boundaries are not strict; they may adapt as we grow
Why this field/method focus?
These were chosen in light of two main factors:
Our founder and our team is most comfortable assessing and managing the consideration of research in these areas.
These fields seem to be particularly amenable to, and able to benefit from our journal-independent evaluation approach. Other fields, such as biology, are already being 'served' by strong initiatives like .
Ex.: work we included/excluded based on field/method
Outcomes, focus areas, and causes
The Unjournal's mission is to prioritize
research with the strongest potential for a positive impact on global welfare
where public evaluation of this research will have the greatest impact
Given this broad goal, we consider research into any cause, topic, or outcome, as long as the research involves fields, methods, and approaches within our domain (see above), and as long as the work meets our other requirements (e.g., research must be publicly shared without a paywall).
While we don't have rigid boundaries, we are nonetheless focusing on certain areas:
(As of Jan. 2024) we have mainly commissioned evaluations of work involving development economics and health-related outcomes and interventions in low-and middle-income countries.
As well as research involving
Environmental economics, conservation, harm to human health
The social impact of AI and emerging technologies
Economics, welfare, and governance
We are currently prioritizing further work involving
Psychology, behavioral science, and attitudes: the spread of misinformation; other-regarding preferences and behavior; moral circles
Animal welfare: markets, attitudes
Methodological work informing high-impact research (e.g., methods for impact evaluation)
We are also considering prioritizing work involving
Quantitative political science (voting, lobbying, attitudes)
Political risks (including authoritarian governments and war and conflict)
Examples of work we chose to prioritize or de-prioritize based on focus area