Water (Feb 2023)

A Bibliometric Analysis of Groundwater Access and Its Management: Making the Invisible Visible

  • Priyanka Lal,
  • Biswaranjan Behera,
  • Malu Ram Yadav,
  • Eshita Sharma,
  • Muhammad Ahsan Altaf,
  • Abhijit Dey,
  • Awadhesh Kumar,
  • Rahul Kumar Tiwari,
  • Milan Kumar Lal,
  • Ravinder Kumar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w15040806
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 4
p. 806

Abstract

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The sustainable management of groundwater resources is required to avoid a water crisis. The current study focused on a bibliometric analysis of groundwater access and management to assess research progress. The study was based on data from Dimensions.ai generated using the search terms “Groundwater”, “access”, and “management” for the period from 1985 to 2022. A total of 534 documents were identified as relevant and retrieved in CSV format. The intellectual structure of the retrieved data was visualized and analyzed using VoS viewer software (version 1.6.18). The analysis showed that the field of earth sciences had the highest number of publications on groundwater access and management (358), followed by the environmental sciences (155). Most of the articles (267) were about Sustainable Development Goal 6, which focuses on ensuring access to clean water and sanitation. The co-authorship analysis for the countries indicated that the United States has the most impact and research, and all other countries have established clusters around it. The citation analysis of the organizations showed that the International Water Management Institute, Charles Sturt University, and Wageningen University and Research were the top three organizations in terms of total citations (825, 611, and 584, respectively), indicating the most effect. The citation analysis for the sources indicated that the “Water” journal had a greater impact on readers with respect to groundwater research. Numerous parties are involved in the groundwater investigation; hence, a broad multidisciplinary approach is required. Therefore, researchers should work together rather than alone to address the problem of sustainable groundwater management.

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