Kamis, 19 Mei 2016

500,000 journal articles listed on RePEc

500,000 journal articles listed on RePEc

The number of articles indexed on RePEc has recently surpassed half a million, with 88% linked to an online version. All these articles have been published in over 1000 journals listed on RePEc.
Journal articles now comprise the majority of the research material on RePEc, but this has not always been so. In fact, in the early days of RePEc, working papers (pre-prints) constituted the vast majority. But as commercial publishers started noticing how popular RePEc and its services were becoming, they wanted to be listed as well. They made the effort of converting their meta-data to our format and make it available at no charge. A few years back, this would have been unimaginable. Little by little, all major publishers opened RePEc archives. Nowadays, it is small independent publishers who join, along with various open access journals that look for free and efficient dissemination of their content through RePEc.
(https://blog.repec.org/2010/02/25/500000-journal-articles-listed-on-repec/)

1.5 million documents in RePEc

1.5 million documents in RePEc

The number of documents indexed in RePEc has recently surpassed 1.5 million. About 900,000 are journal articles, 560,000 are working papers and the rest is distributed across books, book chapters and software components. The number of documents available online is approaching 1.4 million. All this is contributed by over 1,600 archives, ranging from the major commercial publishers to small research centers.
I do not think we expected that many documents related to economics to be listed when RePEc was started. And yet, the number of additions keeps increasing. One would have expected all the low-hanging fruit to have been picked since 1997, but no, they keep coming. Fortunately, RePEc is completely scalable, so we are ready for the next half million. Some RePEc services (those using the RePEc data), however, start struggling a little bit with the mass of data. We expect that some efforts will be dedicated to back-end work for these services.
And if your institution or publisher is still not participating in RePEc, here are instructions. If you are an individual from an institution that does not want to participate, you can upload your works at MPRA and they will be included in RePEc.
(https://blog.repec.org)

RePEc now indexes over one million works

RePEc now indexes over one million works

RePEc has reached over the last week-end a historic mark: one million works in Economics and neighboring sciences are now indexed, of which 87.5% are available for download. The bibliographic database is comprised by 59.2% of journal articles, 38.5% of working papers, 1.3% of book chapters, 0.8% of books, and 0.2% of software components. All this material has been indexed by volunteers maintaining close to 1300 archives. As RePEc bears no costs, all the data is made available for free.
When RePEc started in June 1997, it built on a stock of metadata with 40,000 entries from its precursor NetEc, which started in 1992. Since then, data holdings have increased in an ever increasing fashion:
ItemsDate
100,000August 2000
200,000July 2003
300,000January 2005
400,000July 2006
500,000September 2007
600,000June 2008
700,000January 2009
800,000September 2009
900,000April 2010
1,000,000January 2011

The data collected by RePEc is used by a large number of free core services, including  EconPapers,  EconomistsOnline,  IDEAS,  NEP  and Socionet. Other services that use RePEc data, however without reporting back usage statistics include, among others, Econlit, Google Scholar, Inomics, Microsoft Academic Search, and Worldcat.

(https://blog.repec.org/2011/01/25/repec-now-indexes-over-one-million-works/)

RePEc is independent and cannot be bought

RePEc is independent and cannot be bought

In light of today’s announcement that Elsevier has bought SSRN, we take the opportunity to clarify whether this could happen to RePEc. The short answer is: no, this is impossible. The long answer is below.
The objective of RePEc is not not maximize profit or monetary value. It is to maximize global welfare, to use terminology from economics, by enhancing the dissemination of economic research for the publishers, the authors and the readers. The democratization of dissemination is a crucial part of our mission. Hence, RePEc was designed to run at extremely low cost, hence making it possible to make all services available for free. RePEc uses volunteer work and sponsorship for hardware, hosting and bandwidth. Volunteers and sponsors are willing to participate because of this mission. This means in particular that RePEc has no revenue. Thus it is unlikely a takeover target.
Furthermore, RePEc is actually just a set of principles of how to organize metadata about publications in economics. The participating publishers simply adhere to those principles to get their metadata included in RePEc. Anybody can come and use this data to create a service that does something with the RePEc data. There is nothing that could be bought, as all the data is actually put in the public domain. One could create a RePEc service that generates revenue. This would be against the principle of RePEc, and nobody can prevent somebody else to create a free RePEc service that does the same. Thus it is unlikely to happen. And in any case, this would still not mean a takeover of RePEc.
We care about our community of users and are here to serve them. RePEc is there to stay, and stay independent and free.
(Christian Zimmermann | Mei 17, 2016 pukul 1:42 pm | Kategori: Workings of RePEc | URL: http://wp.me/pnluC-m0)
https://blog.repec.org/2016/05/17/repec-is-independent-and-cannot-be-bought/#comments.

IDEAS-RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)

Research classified by Journal of Economic Literature (JEL) codes
https://ideas.repec.org/j/B31.html

Top JEL
/ B: Schools of Economic Thought and Methodology
/ / B3: History of Economic Thought: Individuals
/ / / B31: Individuals

Most recent items first, undated at the end.
2016 Economic Philosophy of al-Mawardi: Economic Behavior in Adab al-Dunya wa-al-Din and al-Ahkam al-Sulthaniyah
by Jaelani, Aan

2016 The Theory of Economic Development of J.A. Schumpeter: Key Features
by BAZHAL, IURII

2016 Frederic S. Lee and His Fight for the Future of Heterodox Economics
by Jo, Tae-Hee

2016 Das Turgot Problem. The method of Economics
by José M. Menudo

2016 The concepts of stock and flow. A revisit of Georgescu-Roegen definitions
by Michele Bruni

2016 From Abstraction to Phenomenology in Social Theory: Yanis Varoufakis the Economist
by Ugo Mattei

2016 The economist quae political economist: Lionel Robbins and the economic adivisory council
by Thiago Dumont Oliveira & Carlos Eduardo Suprinyak

2016 Czech Economist Karel Engliš and his Relation to The Austrian School in the First Half of the 20th Century
by Ilona Bažantová

2016 Keynes's attack on the citadel: proportionality, the two-price theory, and monetary circulation
by Mark Lautzenheiser & Yavuz YaÅŸar

2016 Curried Keynesianism meets the master: Lauchlin Currie's memorandum on The General Theory for the Federal Reserve Board
by Matías Vernengo

2016 Raúl Prebisch y la dinámica económica: crecimiento cíclico e interacción entre el centro y la periferia
by Pérez Caldentey, Esteban & Vernengo, Matías

2016 Retrospectives: How Economists Came to Accept Expected Utility Theory: The Case of Samuelson and Savage
by Ivan Moscati

2016 Roland Fryer: 2015 John Bates Clark Medalist
by Lawrence F. Katz

2015 Crossing the Borders: McCloskey and Humanistic Approach to Economics
by D. Raskov.

2015 Ordoliberalism, pragmatism and the eurozone crisis: How the German tradition shaped economic policy in Europe
by Feld, Lars P. & Köhler, Ekkehard A. & Nientiedt, Daniel

2015 A Certain Amount of ‘Recantation'. On the Origins of Frank H. Knight’s Antipositivism
by Luca Fiorito

2015 An Overarching Model For The Micro And Macro Psychological And Social Sciences
by George McMillan

2015 Anfänge der amtlichen Statistik und der Sozialberichterstattung: die "politische" Arithmetik
by Gert G. Wagner

2015 Octav Onicescu – Omul si opera Restituiri: contributii la dezvoltarea cercetarii economice Entropia informationala în economie - Versiune preliminara -
by Preda, Vasile & Dedu, Silvia

2015 An initial 'Keynesian illness'? Friedman on taxation and the inflationary gap
by Levrero, Enrico Sergio

2015 At the Root of Economic Fluctuations: Expectations, Preferences and Innovation. Theoretical Framework and Empirical Evidences
by Ferlito, Carmelo

2015 Disputed (Disciplinary) Boundaries. Philosophy, Economics and Value Judgments
by silvestri, paolo

2015 Two Opposing Economic-Literary Critiques of Socialism: George Orwell Versus Eugen Richter and Henry Hazlitt
by Makovi, Michael

2015 Do Economic Models Have to be Realistic?: A Methodological Criticism of Rousseau's Discourse on Inequality
by Makovi, Michael

2015 Networks in Manuel Castells’ theory of the network society
by Anttiroiko, Ari-Veikko

2015 Ranking authors and institutions by publications in regional science journals: 2010-2014
by Rickman, Dan S. & Winters, John V

2015 A tale of paradigm clash: Simon, situated cognition and the interpretation of bounded rationality
by Petracca, Enrico

2015 George Orwell as a Public Choice Economist
by Makovi, Michael

2015 The Welfare Costs of Rent-Seeking: A Methodologically Individualist & Subjectivist Revision
by Makovi, Michael

2015 Two Opposing Economic-Literary Critiques of Socialism: George Orwell Versus Eugen Richter and Henry Hazlitt
by Makovi, Michael

2015 George Orwell and the Incoherence of Democratic Socialism
by Makovi, Michael

2015 Two-Population Social Cycle Theories
by Callahan, Gene & Hoffmann, Andreas

2015 Hayek’s Scientism Essay and the social aspects of objectivity and the mind
by Diogo de Melo Lourenço

2015 Helping Cost, Assortative Matching and Production Cycles in the Dynamic Humean Farmer Game
by Raul V. Fabella

2015 Ewolucja pogladow Miltona Friedmana, a ocena polityki pienieznej Fed i EBC w okresie kryzysu finansowego
by Maciej Ryczkowski

2015 On Joan Robinson’s Abandonment of Exploitation
by Daniyal Khan

2015 Age, Cohort and Co-Authorship
by Daniel S. Hamermesh

2015 Directed Technical Change and Capital Deepening: A Reconsideration of Kaldor’s Technical Progress Function
by Schlicht, Ekkehart

2015 Directed Technical Change and Capital Deepening: A Reconsideration of Kaldor’s Technical Progress Function
by Schlicht, Ekkehart

2015 Citations in Economics: Measurement, Uses and Impacts
by Hamermesh, Daniel S.

2015 Age, Cohort and Co-Authorship
by Hamermesh, Daniel S.

2015 Gary Becker: Model Economic Scientist
by Heckman, James J.

2015 Le economiste in Italia negli anni ‘50: Il caso di Vera Cao Pinna
by Giulia Zacchia

2015 Recent Engagements with Adam Smith and the Scottish Enlightenment
by Maria Pia Paganelli

2015 Kinds of Scientific Rationalism: The Case for Methodological Liberalism
by Scott Scheall

2015 Beyond capital fundamentalism: Harrod, Domar and the history of development economics
by Mauro Boianovsky

2015 The Road to Servomechanisms: The Influence of Cybernetics on Hayek from The Sensory Order to the Social Order
by Gabriel Oliva

2015 From bioeconomics to degrowth: About convergences and divergences between Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen and Serge Latouche
by FERRARI Sylvie

2015 Foundations and bioeconomic issues of sustainability: The contribution of Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen
by FERRARI Sylvie

2015 Wieser as a Theorist of Institutional Change
by Agnès Festré & Pierre Garrouste

2015 Michael Polanyi's Economics: A Strange Rapprochement
by Agnès Festré & Pierre Garrouste

2015 Can Recessions be 'Productive'? Schumpeter and the Moderns
by Muriel Dal-Pont Legrand & Harald Hagemann

2015 Revisiting New Institutional Economics: Basic Concepts And Research Directions
by Zoran Stefanovic, Branislav Mitrovic

2015 At the origin of the notion of “creative goods” in economics: Scitovsky and Hawtrey
by Antonio Bariletti & Eleonora Sanfilippo

2015 Principales aportes de las mujeres al pensamiento económico entre los siglos XVIII-XX
by Natalia Ramírez Virviescas

2015 Ordoliberalism, Pragmatism and the Eurozone Crisis: How the German Tradition Shaped Economic Policy in Europe
by Lars P. Feld & Ekkehard A. Köhler & Daniel Nientiedt

2015 Marx, the notebooks on the crisis of 1866 and structural changes in capitalism: investigating financial innovation and stock exchanges
by João Antonio de Paula & Hugo Eduardo da Gama Cerqueira & Leonardo Gomes de Deus & Carlos Eduardo Suprinyak & Eduardo da Motta e Albuquerque

2015 Alfred Marshall's Puzzles. Between Economics as a Positive Science and Economic Chivalry
by Joanna Dzionek-Kozlowska

2015 Sobre dos traducciones al castellano (en 1811) de la politique naturelle del Barón de Holbach
by Claude MORANGE

2015 The Life And Work Of Martin Stuart ("Marty") Feldstein
by Horioka, Charles Yuji

2015 “Out of sight, out of mind”: Social interactions and Smith's asymmetrical sympathy
by Andrés Álvarez & Jimena Hurtado

2015 Networks in context: the concept of network in Manuel Castells' theory of the network society
by Ari-Veikko ANTTIROIKO

2015 Re-centering Class in Critical Theory
by Rajesh Bhattacharya & Ian J. Seda-Irizarry

2015 Was Henri de Man an Early Post-Keynesian Neo-Marxist?
by Ludo Cuyvers

2015 The economic policy of the allies in the post-war West Germany (1945-1947 years)
by Nevskiy, Sergei

2015 Giacomo Becattini and the Marshall’s method
by Trullén , Joan

2015 Beyond geo-sectoriality: the productive chorality of places
by Becattini , Giacomo

2015 Siro Lombardini su monopolio e concorrenza
by Terenzio Cozzi

2015 Manlio Rossi-Doria
by Michele De Benedictis

2015 Un ribelle jevoniano (A Jevonian Seditionist)
by Sidney Weintraub

2015 Sidney Weintraub e i post-keynesiani d’America (Sydney Weintraub and the American Post-Keynesians)
by Alessandro Roncaglia

2015 Transaction Costs, Property Rights and Externalities - on the Contribution of R. H. Coase to Economic
by Anetta Čaplánová & Marcel Novák

2015 Entre liberalismo y nacionalismo en México. El pensamiento económico de José Yves Limantour (1892-1911)
by Iliana Marcela Quintanar Zárate

2015 Ezequiel Rojas: entre utilitarismo e ideología
by Jimena Hurtado

2015 Proyecto LINK y Econometría de Alta Frecuencia: Las últimas aportaciones econométricas de Lawrence R. Klein /LINK Project and High Frequency Econometrics: Recent Econometric Contributions of Lawrence R. Klein
by CASTILLA, ADOLFO

2015 La herencia de Klein (1920-2013): Una visión de futuro/The Legacy of Klein (1920-2013): A Vision of the Future
by PULIDO SANROMAN, ANTONIO

2015 Disproportionality and Business Cycle from Tugan-Baranovskij to Spiethoff
by Carmelo Ferlito

2015 The economic thought of the first Colombian economists
by Germán Raúl Chaparro & Luis Álvaro Gallardo Eraso

2015 Between Theory and Pragmatism
by Bodo HERZOG

2015 Bekker Zsuzsa 1941-2015
by Madarász, Aladár

2015 Uncertainty In Neoclassical And Keynesian Theoretical Approaches: A Behavioural Perspective
by Sinziana BALTATESCU

2015 Notes in the margin to a recent collection of essays by Luigi Einaudi
by Amedeo Fossati

2015 Le "prefazioni" di J.M. Keynes alle traduzioni della sua teoria generale: estemporanee annotazioni
by Antoni Maria Fusco

2015 Glimpses of Henry Schultz in Mussolini’s 1934 Italy
by n.d.

2015 The Shaping of Incomes Policy in the Eighties. The Contribution of Ezio Tarantelli
by Giovanni Michelagnoli

2015 Copernicus and the Quantity Theory of Money
by William VanLear

2015 Friedrich Hayek y sus dos visitas a Chile
by Bruce Caldwell & Leonidas Montes

2015 Institutional determinants — decorations or yoke — a crisis test
by Waclaw Stankiewicz

2015 Una aproximación al pensamiento económico-normativo de John Rawls
by Martínez Vallejo Diego Fernando

2015 Estructura productiva desequilibrada: un análisis de las contribuciones de Marcelo Diamand a la teoría económica
by Ariel Dvoskin & Germán Feldman

2015 Du libéralisme historique à la crise sociale du xx e siècle. La lecture de Wilhelm Röpke
by Raphaël Fèvre

2015 Stanislaw Staszic. Miedzy Bogiem a natura/Stanislaw Staszic. Between God and Nature Approach to the Issue of Social Elites
by Janusz Skodlarski

2015 Matthew Gentzkow, Winner of the 2014 Clark Medal
by Andrei Shleifer

2015 Stress for Success: A Review of Timothy Geithner's Financial Crisis Memoir
by Gary Gorton

2015 Revisiting Samuelson's Foundations of Economic Analysis
by Roger E. Backhouse

2015 Gary Becker's Impact on Economics and Policy
by Edward P. Lazear

2015 Gary Becker: Model Economic Scientist
by James J. Heckman

2015 Gary Becker as Teacher
by Kevin M. Murphy

Kamis, 12 Mei 2016

About FORCE11

About FORCE11: FORCE11 is a community of scholars, librarians, archivists, publishers and research funders that has arisen organically to help facilitate the change toward improved knowledge creation and sharing. Individually and collectively, we aim to bring about a change in modern scholarly communications through the effective use of information technology. FORCE11 has grown from a small group of like-minded individuals into an open movement with clearly identified stakeholders associated with emerging technologies, policies, funding mechanisms and business models.

Rabu, 11 Mei 2016

FSEI in EDIRC/RePEc

Economics Departments, Institutes and Research Centers in the World

Fakultas Syariah dan Ekonomi Islam
Institut Agama Islam Negeri Syekh Nurjati Cirebon

Translation: Faculty of Sharia and Islam Economics
Translation: State Islamic Institute of Syekh Nurjati
https://edirc.repec.org/data/fssncid.html
Location: Cirebon, Indonesia
Homepage: http://syekhnurjati.ac.id/fsei
Email: aan_jaelani@syekhnurjati.ac.id
Phone: +62231-481264 Fax: +62231-489926
Postal: Handle: RePEc:edi:fssncid
Areas or Functions: Miscellaneous (Academics)