A CiteSpace-based Bibliometric Review of Public Health Governance System with the Belt and Road Initiative
Journal: Modern Economics & Management Forum DOI: 10.32629/memf.v5i6.3189
Abstract
With the support of CiteSpace, this paper adopts bibliometric analysis to sort out macro concepts of the literature on public health under the Belt and Road Initiative and public health governance. Visual knowledge graphs are drawn in terms of keywords, authors, institutions, funding sources, and more. By extracting keywords for co-occurrence analysis, this paper delivers the summary graph on research fronts and the timespan graph of keywords. It presents the structure of research developments from the perspectives of time and theme to analyze the hot topics and trends of studies related to public health under the BRI and public health governance. In conclusion, the role of the BRI and the establishment of the public health governance system have not yet become trending topics and much-discussed issues in the field of public health. In addition, relevant studies mainly focus on theoretical conception, thus leaving considerable potential for further exploration in terms of law implementation.
Keywords
public health under the Belt and Road Initiative; knowledge graph analysis; CiteSpace
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[3] Friel, S., Ponnamperuma, S., Schram, A., Gleeson, D., Kay, A., Thow, A. M., Labonte, R. Shaping the discourse: What has the food industry been lobbying for in the Trans Pacific Partnership trade agreement and what are the implications for dietary health? Critical Public Health.2016; 26(5), 518-529.
[4] Townsend, B., Schram, A., Labonté, R., Baum, F., & Friel, S. How do actors with asymmetrical power assert authority in policy agenda-setting? A study of authority claims by health actors in trade policy. Social Science & Medicine. 2019;236, 112430.
[5] Ralston, R., Hirpa, S., Bassi, S., Male, D., Kumar, P., Barry, R. A., & Collin, J. Norms, rules and policy tools: understanding Article 5.3 as an instrument of tobacco control governance. Tobacco control. 2022; 31(Suppl 1), s53-s60.
[6] Male, D., Ralston, R., Nyamurungi, K., & Collin, J.‘That is a Ministry of Health thing’: Article 5.3 implementation in Uganda and the challenge of whole-of-government accountability. Tobacco Control. 2022; 31(Suppl 1), s12-s17.
[7]Patay, D., Schram, A., & Friel, S. The role of causal ideas in the governance of commercial determinants of health. A qualitative study of tobacco control in the pacific. Social Science & Medicine. 2022; 314, 115481.
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