On 12 May 1997, a group of people met at the University of Surrey at the initiative of Thomas Krichel, then a graduate student and lecturer there. The topic was to discuss Krichel’s proposal of a scheme to exchange metadata about publications in economics, in particular working papers. With its adoption, RePEc was born, and its scheme is today still powering the data collection for all RePEc services. You can find more about the history of RePE
Among the many services that RePEc provide, the RePEc Author Service (RAS) holds a special place. In...
Dave Puplett reports on the Subject Repositories: European Collaboration in the International Contex...
This brief article tells of the emergence and development of a service for speedy, on-line distribut...
RePEc: Research Papers in Economics (http://repec.org) is a volunteer-driven initiative to create a ...
The first electronic Economics preprint appeared in 1993. Since then the growth has been dramatic as...
After arXiv.org, the RePEc economics library offers the second-largest source of freely downloadable...
The first electronic Economics preprint appeared in 1993. Since then the growth has been dramatic as...
Publishing articles on the economics involves long time frames of up to several years, from submissi...
Introduction: The disciplinary repository RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) provides access to a...
This paper updates Goffe and Parks (1997), which examined the Internet infrastructure of the economi...
This document describes the data available through RePEc and related services: CitEc, CollEc, EDIRC,...
Cataloging online documents requires a finer level of granularity than many other objects. Collectin...
Thomas Krichel speaks about the RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) system (http://RePEc.org). RePE...
RePEc is a large digital library for the economics community. “NEP: New Economics Papers” is a curre...
Abstract. RePEc is one of the largest open access digital libraries in the world. It has been develo...
Among the many services that RePEc provide, the RePEc Author Service (RAS) holds a special place. In...
Dave Puplett reports on the Subject Repositories: European Collaboration in the International Contex...
This brief article tells of the emergence and development of a service for speedy, on-line distribut...
RePEc: Research Papers in Economics (http://repec.org) is a volunteer-driven initiative to create a ...
The first electronic Economics preprint appeared in 1993. Since then the growth has been dramatic as...
After arXiv.org, the RePEc economics library offers the second-largest source of freely downloadable...
The first electronic Economics preprint appeared in 1993. Since then the growth has been dramatic as...
Publishing articles on the economics involves long time frames of up to several years, from submissi...
Introduction: The disciplinary repository RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) provides access to a...
This paper updates Goffe and Parks (1997), which examined the Internet infrastructure of the economi...
This document describes the data available through RePEc and related services: CitEc, CollEc, EDIRC,...
Cataloging online documents requires a finer level of granularity than many other objects. Collectin...
Thomas Krichel speaks about the RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) system (http://RePEc.org). RePE...
RePEc is a large digital library for the economics community. “NEP: New Economics Papers” is a curre...
Abstract. RePEc is one of the largest open access digital libraries in the world. It has been develo...
Among the many services that RePEc provide, the RePEc Author Service (RAS) holds a special place. In...
Dave Puplett reports on the Subject Repositories: European Collaboration in the International Contex...
This brief article tells of the emergence and development of a service for speedy, on-line distribut...