The AMI Comprehensive Evaluation Report of Chinese Journals of Humanities and Social Sciences (Chinese: ãÂÂä¸Âå½人æÂÂ社ä¼Âç§Â妿ÂÂÃ¥ÂÂAMI综åÂÂè¯Âä»·æÂ¥åÂÂãÂÂ; pinyin: Zhà Ângguó Rénwén Shèhuì KÃÂxué QëkÃÂn AMI Zònghé PÃÂngjiàBàogào), commonly known as the AMI Comprehensive Evaluation Report (AMIæ ¸å¿ÂæÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ), is an academic evaluation system and report developed by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS). The system is one of the three major journal evaluation frameworks officially recognized in ChinaâÂÂs humanities and social sciences, alongside Nanjing UniversityâÂÂs Chinese Social Sciences Citation Index (CSSCI) and Peking UniversityâÂÂs A Guide to the Core Journals of China (commonly known as the Peking University Core Journals List).
The AMI system was developed under a national initiative to establish a comprehensive evaluation framework for philosophy and social sciences journals, moving beyond traditional bibliometric indicators such as impact factors. In 2014, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Evaluation Center (ä¸Âå½社ä¼Âç§Âå¦è¯Âä»·ä¸Âå¿Â) released the first China Humanities and Social Sciences Journal Evaluation Report (2014) â the inaugural AMI Comprehensive Evaluation Report â and announced the first list of AMI Core Journals. Following its four-year evaluation cycle, subsequent editions were released in 2018 and 2022, each providing updated assessments and revised core journal lists based on new data and refined methodologies.
The AMI acronym stands for:
The AMI Comprehensive Evaluation Index System consists of three primary indicators, thirteen secondary indicators, and thirty-one tertiary indicators.