Socio-Economic Review

Papers
(The H4-Index of Socio-Economic Review is 14. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-08-01 to 2025-08-01.)
ArticleCitations
The labor of assetization: producing ‘hypergrowth’ inside a tech startup82
‘It’s a who-you-know thing’: interactional fraud prevention in non-bank check cashing79
The art of (self)legitimization: how private museums help their founders claim legitimacy as elite actors39
Persistent or temporary? Effects of social assistance benefit sanctions on employment quality33
Stock market reactions to downsizing announcements: an analysis through an institutional lens31
Control and consent in the connected age: the work of contractors on transnational online education platforms30
Gendered publication patterns in Socio-Economic Review28
Varieties of the rat race: working hours in the age of abundance27
When shareholder power kicks in: corporate financialization as ratchet behaviour and sticky payouts25
In your face: a comparative field experiment on racial discrimination in Europe20
Fintech as invasive infrastructure: a critical discourse analysis of corporate newswires and press releases, 1995–202117
On Philip Rathgeb’s How the Radical Right Has Changed Capitalism and Welfare in Europe and the USA, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 202417
Alternativizing markets: the framing of moral commerce17
Rethinking moral hazard: government protection and bank risk-taking14
On Rebecca Elliott’s Underwater: Loss, Flood Insurance, and the Moral Economy of Climate Change in the United States, Columbia University Press, 202114
Socio-economic framework for the design of national household insolvency systems14
Producerist populist attitudes and electoral support for populism in the USA and Western Europe14
Power and inequality: determinants of income inequality in rich capitalist democracies, 1960 to 201914
Structural adjustment and the political economy of capital flight14
Correction to: Merit recruitment, professional advancement opportunities and prosocial rule-breaking among public servants in Greece14
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