We study how the democratization of the diffusion of research through the Internet could have helped non traditional fields of research. The specific case we approach is Heterodox Economics as its pre-prints are disseminated through NEP, the email alert service of RePEc. Comparing heterodox and mainstream papers, we find that heterodox ones are quite systematically more downloaded, and particularly so when considering downloads per subscriber. We conclude that the Internet definitely helps heterodox research, also because other researcher get exposed to it. But there is still room for more participation by heterodox researchers
This brief article tells of the emergence and development of a service for speedy, on-line distribut...
The papers in this issue of First Monday were originally presented as a series of panels at the Asso...
In this paper, the notion that Internet-based resources can be viewed using the common-pool resource...
We study how the democratization of the diffusion of research through the Internet could have helped...
Heterodox economics is in part defined by exclusion from orthodox circles and there is an understan...
Abstract A key aspect of generating new ideas is drawing from different elements of preexisting know...
Publishing articles on the economics involves long time frames of up to several years, from submissi...
Recent research on search costs in electronic markets documents that the wide use of Internet has re...
Copyright © 2015 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Common...
A general aversion to new ideas, psychological factors, and foremost, institutional conditions shape...
This paper adds to the growing literature on the formation of online communities from an historical ...
This paper updates Goffe and Parks (1997), which examined the Internet infrastructure of the economi...
The Internet is receiving increasing attention as a medium for technology transfer between public re...
This report concerns a pilot study of patterns of access to scientific documents made available on t...
The Internet, a growing network of networks, is an often touted and often misunderstood technology....
This brief article tells of the emergence and development of a service for speedy, on-line distribut...
The papers in this issue of First Monday were originally presented as a series of panels at the Asso...
In this paper, the notion that Internet-based resources can be viewed using the common-pool resource...
We study how the democratization of the diffusion of research through the Internet could have helped...
Heterodox economics is in part defined by exclusion from orthodox circles and there is an understan...
Abstract A key aspect of generating new ideas is drawing from different elements of preexisting know...
Publishing articles on the economics involves long time frames of up to several years, from submissi...
Recent research on search costs in electronic markets documents that the wide use of Internet has re...
Copyright © 2015 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Common...
A general aversion to new ideas, psychological factors, and foremost, institutional conditions shape...
This paper adds to the growing literature on the formation of online communities from an historical ...
This paper updates Goffe and Parks (1997), which examined the Internet infrastructure of the economi...
The Internet is receiving increasing attention as a medium for technology transfer between public re...
This report concerns a pilot study of patterns of access to scientific documents made available on t...
The Internet, a growing network of networks, is an often touted and often misunderstood technology....
This brief article tells of the emergence and development of a service for speedy, on-line distribut...
The papers in this issue of First Monday were originally presented as a series of panels at the Asso...
In this paper, the notion that Internet-based resources can be viewed using the common-pool resource...