This paper investigates the impact of the global financial crisis on the
shape of economics as a discipline by analyzing EconLit-indexed journals from
2006 to 2020 using a multilayer network approach. We consider two types of
social relationships among journals, based on shared editors (interlocking
editorship) and shared authors (interlocking authorship), as well as two forms
of intellectual proximity, derived from bibliographic coupling and textual
similarity. These four dimensions are integrated using Similarity Network
Fusion to produce a unified similarity network from which journal communities
are identified. Comparing the field in 2006, 2012, and 2019 reveals a high
degree of structural continuity. Our findings suggest that, despite changes in
research topics after the crisis, fundamental social and intellectual
relationships among journals have remained remarkably stable. Editorial
networks, in particular, continue to shape hierarchies and legitimize knowledge
production
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