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Krichel, T. RePEc, an Open Library for Economics, 2000. In The Economics and Usage of Digital Library Collections,Ann Arbor, Michigan (US),2000-03-23 to 2000-03-24.(Unpublished) [Conference Paper].
See the references list of this item
Citable URI:
http://hdl.handle.net/10760/12154
Files in This Item:
| File |
Description |
Size | Format | Visibility |
| salisbury.a4.pdf | | 116.3 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open
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| Author(s): | Krichel, Thomas |
| Title: | RePEc, an Open Library for Economics |
| Subjects: | I. Information treatment for information services > IA. Cataloguing, bibliographic control |
| Date: | 2000 |
| Abstract: | After arXiv.org, the RePEc economics library offers the second-largest source of freely downloadable scientific preprints in the world. RePEc has a different business model and a different content coverage than arXiv.org. This paper addresses both differences.
As far as the business model is concerned, RePEc is an instance of a concept that I call the "Open Library". An Open Library is open in two ways. It is open for contribution (third parties can add to it), and it is open for implementation (many user services may be created). Conventional libraries--including most digital libraries--are closed in both directions.
As far as the content coverage is concerned, RePEc seeks to build a relational dataset about scholarly resources and other content relating of to these resources. This basically means the identification of all authors, all papers and all institutions that work in economics. Such an ambitious project can only be achieved if the cost to collect data is decentralized and low, and if the benefits to supply data are large. The Open Library provides a framework where these conditions are fulfilled. |
| Conference: | The Economics and Usage of Digital Library Collections |
| Conference Date: | 2000-03-23 to 2000-03-24 |
| Location: | Ann Arbor, Michigan (US) |
| Keywords: | open library; econonomics |
| Country: | United States |
| Type: | Conference Paper |
| Rights: | http://eprints.rclis.org/copyright/ |
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References
- Trivedi, Pravin K. (1993). An analysis of publication delays in Econometrics. Journal of Applied Econometrics 8(2), 93--100.
- Harnad, Stevan (1995). The Postgutenberg Galaxy: how to get there from here. available at http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/THES/
- Lawrence, Steve and C. Lee Giles (1999). Accessibility of information on the web. Nature 400(8 July), 107--109.
- Karlsson, Sune and Thomas Krichel (1999). RePEc and S-WoPEc: Internet access to electronic preprints in Economics. presented at the Third ICCC/IFIP Conference on Electronic Publishing in Ronneby, May 10--12 May 1999, available at http://gretel.econ.surrey.ac.uk/papers/lindi.pdf.
- Krichel, Thomas (2000). ReDIF version 1. available at http://openlib.org/acmes/root/docu/.papers/redif_1.a4.pdf.
- Van De Sompel, Herbert, Thomas Krichel, Micheal L. Nelson, et al. (2000). The UPS Prototype project: exploring the obstacles in creating a cross e-print archive end-user service). Old Dominion Computer Science Tech Report, available at http://openlib.org/home/krichel/papers/upsproto.ps.
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