《动态】六字总结 I 学术厨房2023年回顾》

  • 来源专题:数智化图书情报
  • 编译者: 于彰淇
  • 发布时间:2024-01-22
  • 本来计划写一下ACM Open模式的设计逻辑的,关于ACM Open,参见??ACM Open vs 转换协议 I 青出于蓝而胜于蓝?。



    但临时看到了学术厨房(The Scholarly Kitchen)发表了一篇2023年回顾文章,而且用六个字母的做了个年度总结。看到那6个字母,第一反应是笑不活了,第二反应是鞭辟入里。大家可以猜一猜,是哪6个字母心急的小伙伴,下滑至第3部分,揭晓答案??另,2023年和2022年的高阅读量文章,相差的还蛮多的;不变的是大家对数据分析类文章的青睐,参见??学术厨房2022年回顾及年终榜单。



    我只摘选了我感兴趣的部分,点击阅读原文阅读全文;此外,一些文章有中文版或者相关文章,整理了一下,一起学习一下~

    1回顾:2023年阅读量最多的10篇文章

    Guest Post — Reputation and Publication Volume at MDPI and FrontiersGitHub is Sued, and We May Learn Something About Creative Commons Licensing??GitHub被起诉,版权问题再引热议,网友类比谷歌图书:毕竟谷歌没拿用户内容写小说Dead as a DoornailAppeals Court Rules That Library of Congress Can No Longer Require Deposit of Published WorksGuest Post – Of Special Issues and Journal Purges??多本期刊被SCIE剔除的背后:大规模增加特刊带来的问题及特刊出版“专业户”Guest Post – MDPI’s Remarkable Growth??MDPI的惊人增长Where Did the Open Access Movement Go Wrong?: An Interview with Richard Poynder??70多个访谈的OA纪录片,却依然说不清学术出版的拉锯战及??开放获取运动失败了,错在哪儿?Guest Post — Academic Publishers Are Missing the Point on ChatGPT??在ChatGPT这件事情上,学术出版商还需要关注这些重点Why Does the U.S. Copyright Office Require Libraries to Lie to Users about Their Fair Use Rights? They Won’t Say.Guest Post — The Efficacy of ChatGPT: Is it Time for the Librarians to Go Home?

    2回顾:2023年发布的阅读量最多的10篇文章


    Guest Post — Reputation and Publication Volume at MDPI and FrontiersGitHub is Sued, and We May Learn Something About Creative Commons LicensingAppeals Court Rules That Library of Congress Can No Longer Require Deposit of Published WorksGuest Post – Of Special Issues and Journal PurgesWhere Did the Open Access Movement Go Wrong?: An Interview with Richard Poynder??70多个访谈的OA纪录片,却依然说不清学术出版的拉锯战及??开放获取运动失败了,错在哪儿?Guest Post — Academic Publishers Are Missing the Point on ChatGPTWhy Does the U.S. Copyright Office Require Libraries to Lie to Users about Their Fair Use Rights? They Won’t Say.Guest Post — The Efficacy of ChatGPT: Is it Time for the Librarians to Go Home?Did ChatGPT Just Lie To Me???关于 ChatGPT 和未来的思考 —— 我们处于人工智能发展曲线的哪个位置?Guest Post — Addressing Paper Mills and a Way Forward for Journal Security??直面论文工厂问题,开辟期刊安全的解决之路 ——Wiley执行副总裁兼研究部总经理发文3回顾2023

    展望2024

    如果用六个字母来总结2023年最热门的主题,那将是:AI和MDPI。猜对了没有???



    尽管AI已经进入我们的世界很多年了,但ChatGPT和其他大型语言模型面向公众的性质引发了有关版权和科研诚信的重要问题。



    MDPI是开放获取作者付费模式的典范,这一模式优缺点并存;Hindawi的撤稿展示了现实中存在着一个庞大的重数量轻质量的市场。



    2024也许与2023年大同小异。2023年我们只是看到了学术交流新模式的冰山一角:不管是AI,还是资助者强制要求OA,还是作者付费。



    致2024!

  • 原文来源:https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/Y1skbynZKbYkRRO327876w
相关报告
  • 《2023年太阳能市场洞察报告年度回顾 |SEIA公司》

    • 来源专题:可再生能源
    • 编译者:武春亮
    • 发布时间:2024-03-06
    • 1.    Key figures . In 2023, the US solar market installed 32.4 GWdc of capacity, a remarkable 51% increase from 2022. This was the industry’s biggest year by far, exceeding 30 GWdc of capacity for the first time.   . Solar accounted for 53% of all new electricity-generating capacity added to the US grid in 2023, making up over half of new generating capacity for the first time. . The residential segment set another annual record at 6.8 GWdc installed in 2023, growing 13% over 2022. However, installations declined both quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year in Q4 as the large pipeline of California projects sold under more beneficial net metering rules in early 2023 was built out. Excluding California, the residential segment remained flat quarter-over-quarter. . The commercial solar segment broke an annual record that has stood since 2017, with 1,851 MWdc installed, growing 19% over 2022. Fourth quarter volumes in California doubled from their typical range as the commercial sector started to see the same surge of installations caused by the switch to net billing.    . The community solar segment installed 1,148 MWdc, a 3% increase over 2022. New York, the largest community solar market that has driven the sector’s growth for several years, declined slightly from 2022. Interconnection delays and permitting challenges continue to limit deployment in other mature markets.  . The utility-scale segment installed a record-breaking 22.5 GWdc in 2023, representing 77% annual growth and nearly 10 GWdc more than 2022. More than 10 GWdc was installed in the fourth quarter. This growth underscores the market impact of supply chain constraints in 2022. Many of the projects completed in 2023 represent delayed buildout of 2022 pipelines.   . Texas beat California to claim the top spot for solar capacity installed in 2023. This is only the second time that Texas has outranked California for annual installations, which also happened in 2021. This is being driven by utility-scale installations in Texas, which amounted to nearly 4 GWdc in Q4 2023 alone.   . Our annual Year in Review report includes extended 10-year outlooks for every segment. The total US solar fleet is expected to nearly quadruple from 177 GWdc installed at year-end 2023, to 673 GWdc installed by 2034. By 2040, solar is expected to make up the largest share of electric generating capacity in the US.   . In this report, we have also included our alternative scenarios (a Bull case and a Bear case). The US solar industry currently faces several uncertainties, including policy outcomes of the upcoming presidential election. Our Bull case considers a future with fewer supply chain constraints, more projects qualifying for tax credit adders, favorable financing conditions, and faster interconnection queue reform, amongst several other factors. This is expected to result in 85 additional GWdc installed through 2034, 17% more than in our Base case. Our Bear case generally considers the opposite conditions, which would reduce our outlook by 24% through 2034, amounting to nearly 120 GWdc less solar capacity. More details and data can be found in the full report. . 2.    Introduction  . The US solar industry installed 32.4 gigawatts-direct current (GWdc) of capacity in 2023, a remarkable 51% increase over 2022. This was the industry’s biggest year by far, exceeding 30 GWdc of capacity for the first time. Every single segment set annual installation records except for community solar, which was within 5 MWdc of an annual record. Growth in 2023 was due to slightly different factors for each segment. Residential solar grew 12%, adding 6.8 GWdc of capacity as installations surged in California as customers rushed to take advantage of more favorable net metering rules before the switch to net billing in April. This helped to offset declines in other states mostly due to interest rate increases. Commercial solar saw a similar increase in California, leading to national growth of 19% over 2022. Community solar grew just 3% compared to 2022. While this segment continues to struggle with interconnection delays and permitting challenges, strong pipelines in states like Illinois, New Jersey, and New York helped contribute to year-over-year growth. Finally, utility-scale installations spiked to 22.5 GWdc of capacity, a 77% increase over 2022. Module import volumes increased over the course of the year as importers worked with Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to demonstrate compliance with the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA). The temporary moratorium on new anticircumvention tariffs applicable to certain imports from four Southeast Asian countries also brought some stability to the solar supply chain. That moratorium ends in June 2024.   Overall, photovoltaic (PV) solar accounted for 53% of all new electricity-generating capacity additions in 2023, making up more than half of new generating capacity for the first time. Record-breaking 2023 to give way to strong growth in 2024 2023 was a year of recovery for the US solar industry. After installation volumes shrank 9% in 2022 due to various trade actions impacting solar imports, supply chain stability helped the industry get back to business in 2023. We expect this momentum to continue into 2024, albeit at a lower growth rate since 2023 installations were record-shattering due to delayed 2022 projects coming to fruition in 2023. Our growth-rate expectations for the commercial, community, and utility-scale segments are 19%, 15%, and 26% for 2024, respectively. There are healthy pipelines of late-stage and under construction projects in each of these segments that will translate to installation growth. Residential solar, however, is expected to decline by 13% in 2024. The impacts of California’s shift to net billing will manifest in lower installation volumes in 2024, as we’ve predicted since late 2022. While installers report there are still NEM 2.0 projects in their backlogs, installation declines began in the fourth quarter – volumes were down 17% year-over-year and 35% quarter-over-quarter in the state. Additionally, the negative impacts of higher interest rates are expected to continue this year, lowering both sales and installations in other states. Looking at all the segments combined, we’re expecting roughly 5 GWdc more to be installed in 2024 compared to 2023, for a total of nearly 38 GWdc. A Bull case with increased supply chain stability, more tax credit financing, and lower interest rates would increase the outlook by 17% For this year’s alternative scenarios, our analysts considered several economic and policy factors that could impact the future of the US solar market. There are always numerous uncertainties to navigate in the solar industry, particularly in a presidential election year. Our Bull case envisions a future with fewer supply chain constraints on solar equipment. In this scenario, we assume CBP allows increasingly more shipments of modules made with non-Xinjiang Chinese polysilicon to enter the country. Sources of supply that aren’t subject to anticircumvention tariffs, such as wafer manufacturing facilities in Southeast Asia, continue to increase. This could impact domestic manufacturing – manufacturing capacity, particularly for modules, will continue to increase but will be challenged by the oversupply environment. Overall, increased supply will help prevent project delays. When it comes to the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), our Bull case assumes that qualifying for and financing tax credits is simple and straightforward. We assume an accelerated expansion of tax credit financing availability – more corporations become tax equity providers and the tax credit transferability market grows rapidly, facilitating more transactions. The tax credit levels for the production tax credit and investment tax credit remain the same, but clear and straightforward guidance from Treasury helps more projects qualify for tax credit adders. We also assume a more optimistic picture for transmission capacity buildout and interconnection reform. In the Bull scenario, transmission projects are fast-tracked, and grid operators implement effective interconnection reforms quickly. This helps speed the approval and installation of solar projects. Finally, our Bull case assumes that interest rates decline and then stabilize faster than in our Base case. We assume the Federal Reserve cuts rates several times this year and next, with rates stabilizing at 3% by the end of 2026. This helps reduce the cost of capital, bringing down solar project costs. Our Bull case results in a 17% increase in total solar installations through 2034 relative to the Base case, translating to an additional 86 GWdc of capacity. On an annual basis, the increase is smaller in the near-term, averaging 13% over the next five years. Near-term installations are less sensitive to our assumptions given typical project timelines, particularly for utility-scale solar. But this annual increase grows to roughly 30% by the end of the outlook. A Bear case with supply chain constraints, less tax credit financing, and static interest rates would decrease the outlook by 24% Our Bear case flips many of the Bull case assumptions in the opposite direction. Firstly, the Bear case envisions an increase in trade actions and other measures that limit supply of solar equipment. This constrains supply to the extent that utility-scale solar (which is more reliant on imported modules than the distributed segments) is limited in the near-term before more domestic manufacturing comes online. But after a few years, supply constraints are mitigated by an acceleration of domestic manufacturing buildout, particularly for cells and wafers. The Bear case assumes the environment for tax credit qualification and financing is uncertain and limited. We assume tax credit financing availability doesn’t keep up with demand. The transferability market faces unforeseen challenges, minimizing availability of financing through tax credit transfers. Guidance issued by the Treasury is released at a slow pace and doesn’t address current uncertainties related to credit qualification. It remains challenging to qualify for the domestic content adder. In our Bear case, transmission projects are even more burdened by development hurdles than they are today. Large projects are delayed or cancelled outright. Interconnection reforms don’t address queue backlogs, further delaying project development. Lastly, the Bear case assumes that interest rates stay static at their current levels through the outlook. This keeps the cost of capital higher, and thus project economics do not improve at the same rates as they would in the Base case or the Bull case. The Bear case results in a 24% decrease in total solar installations through 2034 compared to the Base case, a reduction of 120 GWdc. Similar to the Bull case, the annual decreases are smaller in the near term, but result in more than 40% lower capacity in some of the latter years of the outlook. Overall, our alternative scenarios highlight that there could be a 200 GWdc swing in solar installations over the next decade based on various political and economic outcomes. We’ve highlighted the most notable assumptions here, but there are several other factors incorporated into our alternative scenarios that contribute to our results. More details on the assumptions for each segment can be found within the full report. Solar deployments to quadruple by 2034 In our Base case outlook, total solar deployment is set to grow to more than 670 GWdc by 2034, nearly quadrupling from today’s level. While we expect about 38 GWdc of capacity installations in 2024, typical volumes will be in the 48-50 GWdc range from 2030 onward. This is a reduction from our expectations in our last Year in Review report. While solar has an incredibly strong outlook, interconnection challenges are the main driver of lower expectations in the latter half of our outlook. While this industry is larger than it has ever been, annual growth over the next 10 years will average 4% compared to 25% for the prior decade. The challenges that currently limit growth in this industry–particularly transmission and interconnection limitations–will only become more heightened over time. Addressing these limitations is key to meeting both decarbonization goals and growing power demand. 3.    Market segment outlooks . 3.1.    Residential PV   . 6.8 GWdc installed in 2023, 1,533 MWdc in Q4 2023 . Up 13% from 2022 . The residential solar market hit another record in 2023 but is set to decline in 2024 2023 was a tumultuous year for the residential solar industry, but it resulted in the segment’s fifth consecutive year of record installed capacity. Installation backlogs from a robust year of sales in 2022 supported growth at the beginning of 2023. However, high interest rates hampered sales throughout 2023, impacting installation volumes more significantly as the year progressed. Although California installations increased through the first three quarters of 2023, the state saw a 35% quarterly drop in capacity in Q4 as installers depleted backlogs of sales made under NEM 2.0. Nationally, the residential segment installed 1,533 MWdc in Q4 to reach 6.8 GWdc of annual installed capacity, a 13% increase from 2022. But Q4 was the lowest quarter of capacity volume since Q2 2022. Installers continued to face challenging market conditions through the fourth quarter of 2023, with many experiencing a more distinct seasonal dip in sales than in recent years. Although many installers report that pricing and financing terms remained steady, several other factors continued to strain their cash flow, such as delayed milestone payments and permitting and interconnection delays in some areas of the country. Thirty-one states and Puerto Rico saw year-over-year growth in 2023, but many installers experienced sales declines throughout the year. Some installers reported 30-50% declines in sales year-over-year in some markets in the fourth quarter, which will result in lower installation volumes in the next few quarters. Wood Mackenzie still forecasts a 13% contraction for the residential solar market in 2024, as installation volumes reflect the impacts of high interest rates and California’s net billing transition. We expect a 40% reduction in California’s installed capacity in 2024, leading to a nationwide contraction of the residential solar market. For all states other than California, we expect flat growth in 2024 as some state markets contract but rising retail rates fuel growth in others. As interest rates decline and more third-party owned projects qualify for the ITC adders, the segment will recover in 2025 with 13% growth and grow steadily from 2026 through 2028. Over the next decade, the segment will add more than 100 GWdc of installed capacity and grow at an average annual rate of 5% between 2024 – 2034 in our Base case outlook. 3.2.    Commercial PV  . 1,851 MWdc installed in 2023, 638 MWdc in Q4 2023 . Up 19% from 2022 . Note on market segmentation: Commercial solar encompasses distributed solar projects with commercial, industrial, agricultural, school, government, or nonprofit offtakers, including remotely net-metered projects. This excludes community solar (covered in the following section). California’s NEM 2.0 installed capacity drives record quarter and year for commercial solar Commercial solar had a record-breaking year with 1.9 GWdc of new capacity installed in 2023, a 19% increase compared to 2022. California accounted for 35% of the national installed capacity in 2023, with installations growing 34% year-over-year. Additionally, the continued easing of supply chain constraints and lower system costs supported development throughout the year. The commercial segment grew by 71% quarter-over-quarter in Q4 2023, driven mainly by a surge of NEM 2.0 installations in California. There were 302 MWdc of installed capacity added in California during Q4 2023, making up half the total quarterly volume. Commercial solar growth has typically come from a few key markets, such as California, New Jersey, New York, Illinois, and Massachusetts. However, both large and small markets contributed to the segment’s growth last year. In 2023, installation volumes in 19 states grew by over 50% year-over-year. Non-traditional states like Georgia and Texas have become particularly attractive for many developers due to low development costs, low building penetration, and ample land. We expect 19% growth in 2024 as California’s NEM 2.0 projects continue to come online through the end of this year. Installations will dip in 2025 due to an expected drop in California’s installations, increased market penetration in certain mature markets, and prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements. Commercial solar projects over 1 MWac that began construction before January 29, 2023 (after which prevailing wage and apprenticeship rules apply), will have mostly been built by 2025. Since new projects larger than 1 MWac must meet these requirements to qualify for the full ITC and PTC amounts, developers likely would have begun construction on a significant portion of their active pipeline before the deadline. Both industry and the federal government’s Departments of the Treasury and Labor continue to work towards final rules, which are expected in late 2024. These dynamics may result in slightly reduced annual installations from 2025 through 2027. In the longer term, growth will gradually increase due to more projects qualifying for the ITC adders and higher retail rates. Overall, we expect 7% average annual growth over the next five years. 3.3.    Community solar PV  . 1,148 MWdc installed in 2023, 315 MWdc installed in Q4 2023 . Up 3% from 2022 . Note on market segmentation: Community solar projects are part of formal programs where multiple residential and non-residential customers can subscribe to the power produced by a local solar project and receive credits on their utility bills. Annual community solar capacity additions break 1 GWdc for a third consecutive year Community solar installations increased by 3% year-over-year in 2023, resulting in 1,148 MWdc of new capacity. Annual installation volumes exceeded our previous expectations by 1.5%, and 2023 marks the third consecutive year national annual capacity exceeded 1 GWdc. Wood Mackenzie currently forecasts 15 community solar state markets, 10 of which experienced year-over-year growth. Maryland and New Jersey had particularly strong years, with capacity additions increasing by 169% and 608% compared to 2022, respectively. Installation volumes in New York decreased slightly in 2023 compared to 2022, but annual additions in the state still comprised 45% of total national installations. Despite year-over-year growth, obstacles persist in mature state markets. Installed capacity in Massachusetts, for example, declined 72% from 2022 as developers continue to wait on siting, permitting, and interconnection reform. Interconnection delays are also impacting newer state markets. Developers anticipated having projects online in Virginia and Delaware by the end of 2023; however, only a single project in Virginia reached completion. Despite these interconnection delays, development pipelines in newer state markets remain very strong, supporting our expectation for 15% annual growth nationally in 2024. Overall, we expect the national community solar market to grow by 7% annually on average through 2028. Large development pipelines in both new and mature state markets bolster near-term growth. Longer-term, Solar for All funding and the availability of the ITC adders will support lasting growth. We also continue to closely monitor implementation of community solar legislation in California, the result of which will be a significant factor in future changes to our national forecast. Additionally, the establishment of new state markets provides room for upside in our five-year outlook. Pre-development pipelines in Ohio, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania exceed 1 GWdc, and there is interest in introducing or expanding community solar legislation in several additional states. . 3.4.    Utility PV . 22.5 GWdc installed in 2023, record-high of 10.5 GWdc installed in Q4 2023 . More than 343 GWdc of utility-scale solar will be added over the next 10 years in our Base case . Utility-scale segment rebounds in 2023 The utility-scale solar segment rebounded in 2023 from the downturn observed in 2022. The sector grew by 77% in installed capacity compared to 2022, with a total of 22.5 GWdc interconnected last year. This growth was acute in Q4 2023, which was a record quarter for the segment by over 4 GWdc. This growth can be largely attributed to module supply chain stabilization within the past year and the subsequent buildout of delayed projects. Although supply chain stabilization allowed the sector to regain momentum in project installations, high interest rates, tighter financing conditions, and interconnection uncertainty slowed contract negotiations. This resulted in a 64% decrease in contracted capacity in 2023 compared to 2022. Only 693 MWdc of projects were contracted in Q4 2023, a record-low quarter that has resulted in the project pipeline dipping below the 90 GWdc threshold at 83 GWdc. This decline is mainly driven by the opposing dynamics of contracting new projects and building projects in the current pipeline. Many developers are focusing on materializing current pipeline with existing module stock before the end of the two-year tariff moratorium in June 2024. In our Base case outlook, Wood Mackenzie forecasts that the utility-scale segment will add 148 GWdc of installed capacity between 2024 and 2028 and 343 GWdc over the next decade. Interest in the segment will remain strong throughout the forecast period as utility procurements, corporate clean energy goals, and state mandated targets continue to drive growth. The different buildout levels presented in the alternative scenarios in the full report are mainly driven by tax credit adders, tax equity availability, labor availability, supply chain dynamics, and interconnection reforms. . 4.    US solar PV forecasts . . 5.    National solar PV system pricing . Residential system pricing is down 2% year-over-year . Commercial system pricing is down 6% year-over-year . Utility-scale system pricing is up 9% for fixed-tilt and 11% for single-axis tracking year-over-year . Note: In November 2023, Wood Mackenzie published a refreshed customer acquisition cost analysis (US distributed solar customer acquisition cost outlook 2023). Therefore, there are changes to the modeled residential customer acquisition costs and overall national average turnkey pricing in this report compared to past quarters. Wood Mackenzie employs a bottom-up modeling methodology to capture, track and report national average PV system pricing by segment for systems installed each quarter. The methodology is based on the tracked wholesale pricing of major solar components and data collected from industry interviews. Wood Mackenzie’s Supply Chain data and models are leveraged to enhance and bolster our pricing outlooks. Wood Mackenzie assumes all product is procured and delivered in the same year as the installation except modules for the utility segment, which are procured one year prior to commercial operation. The rapid decline in module prices for the distributed generation segments resulted in both quarterly and annual system cost decreases for the residential and commercial segments. As residential solar demand declined faster than installers anticipated throughout 2023, the segment experienced an oversupply of modules, which then sold at significant discounts towards the end of the year as demand slumped. As a result, average module prices decreased by 43% and 34% year-over-year for the residential and commercial segments, respectively. The average residential PV system price was down by 2% (with module cost declines partially offset by increases in customer acquisition costs), and the commercial PV system price decreased by 6% year-over-year in Q4 2023. By contrast, the one-year lag in module procurement and the rising balance of plant and labor costs resulted in a 10% year-over-year increase in average utility PV system prices. License . Ownership rights This report ("Report") and all Solar Market Insight® ("SMI")TM reports are jointly owned by Wood Mackenzie and the SEIA® (jointly, "Owners") and are protected by United States copyright and trademark laws and international copyright/intellectual property laws under applicable treaties and/or conventions. Purchaser of Report or other person obtaining a copy legally ("User") agrees not to export Report into a country that does not have copyright/intellectual property laws that will protect rights of Owners therein. 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  • 《聚焦 | 中国十大学术热点回顾》

    • 来源专题:数智化图书情报
    • 编译者:杨小芳
    • 发布时间:2023-12-29
    • 学术观照时代,创新引领未来。年度中国十大学术热点评选活动已连续开展21届,清晰呈现了我国哲学社会科学创新发展的主题主线,客观反映了学术理论研究取得的主要成果。评选活动坚持以习近平新时代中国特色社会主义思想为指导,秉持“立足中国实践、推动理论创新”理念,将大数据分析与专家评议相结合,经过读者调查、学者推荐、专家研讨、投票确定等程序,归纳、提炼出能够反映当年度我国哲学社会科学学术理论研究新进展、新成果与新趋势的热点问题。评选活动既是对一年来我国哲学社会科学研究的系统回顾,也是对现实焦点问题、深层理论问题的聚焦及其未来研究趋势的展望,更有助于营造“社会关注学术,学术服务社会”的良好氛围,为建构中国自主的知识体系提供智力支持。 2022年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:“两个结合”与马克思主义中国化时代化 热点二:中国式现代化研究 热点三:全过程人民民主的科学内涵与制度体现 热点四:多学科视域中的共同富裕研究 热点五:百年变局下的国际经济体系重构 热点六:秦汉基层社会研究 热点七:中国现当代文学史料的整理与运用 热点八:区域国别学的跨学科建构 热点九:新发展阶段的社会治理创新 热点十:元宇宙与数字化生存新叙事 2021年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:习近平法治思想研究 热点二:中国共产党百年奋斗伟大历程、重大成就和历史经验 热点三:中国现代考古学的理论与实践 热点四:数字时代劳动的哲学审视 热点五:平台经济领域的反垄断规制 热点六:新型举国体制下重大科技创新管理研究 热点七:多学科视域下的总体国家安全观 热点八:深化新时代教育评价改革研究 热点九:全面现代化与中国特色社会主义社会学 热点十:碳达峰碳中和与绿色转型 2020年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:习近平生态文明思想研究 热点二:马克思主义经典作家的理论贡献及当代价值 热点三:百年变局下的中国与世界 热点四:民法典阐释与适用 热点五:中华文化基因的历史探源 热点六:重大突发公共卫生事件的多学科研究 热点七:脱贫攻坚与乡村振兴 热点八:张载思想的现代价值 热点九:图像学视域下的文学艺术研究 热点十:数字经济与发展新动能 2019年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:习近平外交思想研究 热点二:新中国成立70周年:成就梳理、经验总结与理论阐释 热点三:国家制度和国家治理问题研究 热点四:五四运动百年回顾 热点五:船山学新诠释 热点六:中国社会学重建40年的回顾与展望 热点七:中华民族共同体意识研究 热点八:中国脱贫攻坚理论与实践 热点九:空间布局优化与区域协调发展研究 热点十:信息社会的学习方式变革 2018年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:习近平新时代中国特色社会主义经济思想研究 热点二:马克思主义与当代社会 热点三:改革开放40年:经验总结、理论创新与学科发展 热点四:高质量发展下的现代化经济体系构建 热点五:乡村振兴战略研究 热点六:监察体制改革与刑事诉讼制度的衔接 热点七:海洋史研究的拓展 热点八:新时代教师队伍建设研究 热点九:算法主导下信息传播的社会影响与挑战 热点十:大数据视域下数字人文研究 2017年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:习近平新时代中国特色社会主义思想研究 热点二:人类命运共同体与全球治理的中国方案 热点三:民法总则的制度创新与理论阐释 热点四:《资本论》的历史地位与当代价值 热点五:人工智能对社会发展的影响与挑战 热点六:IP产业发展与网络文艺新形态 热点七:海昏侯墓考古发掘与历史文化研究 热点八:未来教育与未来学校的发展图景 热点九:中国特色社会主义政治经济学理论体系构建 热点十:共享发展理念推动下的共享经济模式研究 2016年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:中国特色哲学社会科学的构建 热点二:新发展理念研究 热点三:南海问题与中国海洋战略 热点四:农村土地“三权分置”法律制度建构 热点五:唯物史观视域中的现代性问题 热点六:鲁迅遗产再审视:纪念鲁迅诞辰135周年暨逝世80周年 热点七:红军长征胜利的历史诠释 热点八:供给侧结构性改革与中国经济持续增长的新动力 热点九:世界一流大学和一流学科建设研究 热点十:中国社会学的历史转向与经典回归 2015年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:“四个全面”战略布局研究 热点二:全球治理与中国外交 热点三:网络空间法治建设研究 热点四:新文化运动百年反思 热点五:东方主战场:中国抗战在世界反法西斯战争中的地位与作用 热点六:“一带一路”:共建开放包容的利益共同体 热点七:“互联网+”时代信息技术发展与教育变革 热点八:媒体融合与新闻传播业变革 热点九:中国人口政策调整及其社会影响 热点十:大气环境治理与低碳发展 2014年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:社会主义核心价值观的培育和践行 热点二:依法治国与国家治理现代化 热点三:儒家思想的政治哲学解读 热点四:微时代的文化传播与话语表达 热点五:中国经济新常态与国家发展战略转型 热点六:中国社会治理体制创新 热点七:甲午战争与东亚历史进程 热点八:老龄化背景下的养老服务体系优化 热点九:教育综合改革背景下招生考试制度的理性探究 热点十:边疆民族问题研究 2013年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:民族复兴与中国梦研究 热点二:马克思主义与分配正义 热点三:全面深化改革整体性战略研究 热点四:大数据国家战略研究 热点五:网络时代与虚拟社会治理 热点六:科学发展观统领下的新型城镇化建设 热点七:司法体制改革进一步助推法治建设 热点八:“新型大国关系”的意涵探索 热点九:中国当代文学的海外传播及其翻译研究 热点十:钓鱼岛历史文献的发掘与解读 2012年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:中国特色社会主义制度研究 热点二:中国特色学术话语体系与国际话语权 热点三:中国经济增长趋势与政策选项 热点四:现代农业发展与粮食安全 热点五:人口结构转变与中国人口问题 热点六:“八二宪法”三十年与法治建设 热点七:城乡教育一体化的发展路径 热点八:《资本论》及其手稿再研究 热点九:莫言获奖与中国当代文学的价值定位 热点十:中国社会史研究的拓展、深化及反思 2011年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:社会主义核心价值观的凝练 热点二:经济社会转型下的文化自觉、自信与自强 热点三:社会建设与社会管理创新 热点四:二元社会结构背景下的城乡统筹发展研究 热点五:“十二五”规划下的经济结构调整与收入分配 热点六:刑事法治中的民生保护与人权保障 热点七:历史唯物主义与中国问题 热点八:公平、质量与教育创新 热点九:新媒体及其社会影响 热点十:百年之际的辛亥革命史 2010年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:当代中国马克思主义大众化的实现路径 热点二:中国社会建设理论与实践的深化 热点三:收入分配改革与社会公平 热点四:政治文化——中国政治发展深层原因的探究 热点五:转型社会中的法治推进路径 热点六:后危机时代的中国经济发展 热点七:生态问题的人文反思和中国关注 热点八:马克思与恩格斯哲学思想之关系 热点九:大学行政管理制度改革的理性 2009年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:经验与模式——新中国六十年社会主义道路的探索 热点二:网络舆情的民意表达与公民有序政治参与 热点三:国际金融危机与后危机时代的世界格局 热点四:社会保障制度改革的理论回应 热点五:低碳经济与中国经济模式转换 热点六:非公有制经济研究的新突破 热点七:历史唯物主义的新阐释 热点八:话语研究的多学科关注 热点九:基础教育改革的理论重建 热点十:传统法律文化中的现代价值 2008年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:中国改革开放三十年的经验总结与理论概括 热点二:文化综合创新与中华民族精神培育 热点三:政府、市场、社会三者关系的新定位 热点四:大部门体制与行政管理体制改革 热点五:全球“金融风暴”下的中国应对 热点六:农村土地制度改革与城乡一体化新格局 热点七:中哲、西哲、马哲对话中的融通 热点八:教育公平与教育均衡发展 热点九:企业社会责任的多学科思考 热点十:世界史学科新体系之建构 2007年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:社会主义核心价值体系研究的深化 热点二:对“生态文明”的多元解读 热点三:经济发展方式选择的科学发展观要求 热点四:“社会建设”概念在理论层面的拓展 热点五:马克思主义经典文献研究与“中国马克思学”问题 热点六:儒学的当代转型 热点七:经济学视野中的快乐和幸福 热点八:新公共管理研究的新收获 热点九:都市化进程的学术镜像 热点十:中国思想史学科的建设与走向 2006年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:和谐社会、和谐文化、和谐世界研究交汇互动 热点二:社会主义新农村建设的理论回应 热点三:社会主义荣辱观研究对思想道德建设的深化 热点四:物权法理论与实践互补共促 热点五:公共服务均等化视野下的社会基本保障 热点六:政治哲学研究呈现新气象 热点七:城市空间与区位理论研究之拓展 热点八:环境史研究异军突起 热点九:消费社会中的文学之出路 热点十:中国近代史上的民族主义多视角解读 2005年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:中国工业化道路的抉择 热点二:能源、资源的开发利用与循环经济 热点三:怎样看待“主流”与“非主流”经济学 热点四:马克思哲学中的现代性思想 热点五:儒家文化及“国学”热的利与弊 热点六:关于非政府组织(NGO)的研究 热点七:大学制度变革的价值取向与模式选择 热点八:中国如何“和平发展” 热点九:城市化与文化研究转型 热点十:抗日战争研究的深化与拓展 2004年度中国十大学术热点 热点一:执政党的执政能力建设问题研究 热点二:构建和谐社会问题研究 热点三:非传统安全研究 热点四:国有企业改革方向问题讨论 热点五:科学发展观指导下的中国宏观经济调控问题 热点六:马克思主义基础理论与学科体系的建设问题 热点七:对哲学本体论的研究 热点八:“人权入宪”的理论探讨 热点九:审美的日常生活化与文学的文化研究 热点十:学术规范与学术道德问题讨论