RePEc: Research Papers in Economics

How you can use RePEc   |   RePEc information for participants   |   Major participants and activity

RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) is a collaborative effort of over 100 volunteers in 44 countries to enhance the dissemination of research in economics. The heart of the project is a decentralized database of working papers, journal articles and software components. All RePEc material is freely available.

You may add your own materials to RePEc through a department or institutional archive -- all institutions are welcome to join and contribute their materials by establishing and maintaining their own RePEc archive. If your institution does not yet participate in RePEc, you may submit your own papers to EconWPA (the Economics Working Paper Archive), and they will automatically be included in RePEc. RePEc does not support personal archives (only institutional archives).

Please note that RePEc does not contain full-text journal articles; RePEc services provide links to many full text articles, but you may need a personal or institutional subscription to follow those links. If a working paper or journal article is not indicated as "downloadable", please contact the author or publisher for assistance.

The RePEc database holds over 270,000 items of interest, over 175,000 of which are available online:
130,000  working papers
139,000  journal articles
1,000  software components
750  book and chapter listings
4,900  author contact and publication listings
8,000  institutional contact listings
 
Bookmark this page to easily locate our services to the economics profession.

How you can use RePEc:

The following web sites offer all or part of the RePEc database for you to browse or search:
RePEc RePEc Author Service: Author registration
EconWPA EconWPA: Authors in institutions lacking a RePEc archive can submit their papers to have them included in the RePEc database.

 

IDEAS IDEAS: the complete RePEc database at your disposal. Working papers, journal articles, software components, author information, directory of institutions.

 

 
EconPapers
EconPapers: Economics at your fingertips. EconPapers provides access to RePEc, the world's largest collection of on-line Economics working papers, journal articles and software.

 

NEP NEP (New Economics Papers): Free email notification of new downloadable working papers for over 40 specific fields. NEP Archives are available.
Mirrors: UK   USA   Japan

 

edirc EDIRC: Economics Departments, Institutes and Research Centers in the World
Mirrors: UK   USA   Japan   Russia

 

LogEc LogEc: Detailed access statistics for RePEc items and authors.
CitEc CitEc: Citations from items in the RePEc database.

 

WebEc WebEc: free information on economics on the web (WWW Virtual Library)
Mirrors: UK   USA   Japan

 

WoPEc WoPEc: Full-text downloadable working papers and journal articles.
Mirrors: UK   USA   Japan

 

BibEc BibEc: bibliographic information on (non-downloadable) working papers and journal articles.
Mirrors: UK   USA   Japan

 

Inomics Inomics: downloadable working papers integrated with information on economics conferences, job information, and Internet search for economists

 

SPZ SPZ: An online workplace for researchers, tutors and students within the RePEc information space.
Socionet Socionet: A Russian (and Russian language) implementation of the RePEc method and database as the collective information environment for the social sciences. Database customization and filtration by a "personal information robot".
IDEAS, EDIRC, EconPapers, EconWPA, WoPEc and BibEc are highlighted in
Google's Web Directory for Economics.

RePEc information for participants

What is RePEc?
RePEc brochure (print doublesided and fold) in US Letter and A4 formats (English), Portuguese and Italian
Authors: register yourself and link to your works with the RePEc Author Service
Providers: please note these restrictions on use of RePEc data.
How scholarly societies may benefit from collaboration with RePEc.
Who is involved with RePEc? Learn more about the RePEc Team.
What RePEc is all about: the Guildford protocol.
Full documentation of the file syntax: about ReDIF (Resource Description Information Format).
To make it easy: Step by step instructions to create a working paper archive.
To make it even easier: templates for copying and pasting.
Once you are participating: Tips and tricks for RePEc archive maintainers.
To check the validity of your archive's materials in RePEc, use these helpful automated reports.
To keep up to date on current events in RePEc: the repec-announce mailing list.
Looking for scripts to automate access to research information? See RePEc scripts.
To contact us: email repec@repec.org.


Recent activity

LogEc list of the top 25 RePEc series last month (in terms of the number of file downloads)

LogEc's complete statistics of last month's activity on all RePEc archives

Major participants

Among the many participating institutions and publishers providing over 1,500 RePEc series, the 30 largest contributing RePEc archives are:
  1. WOPEBI (Canada)
  2. Federal Reserve System (Fed) in Print (USA)
  3. Blackwell Publishing
  4. National Bureau of Economic Research (USA)
  5. WoPEc (non-UK)
  6. Oxford University Press
  7. American Economic Association
  8. University of Chicago Press
  9. Taylor & Francis Journals
  10. MIT Press
  11. Kluwer Academic Publishers
  12. DEGREE (Netherlands)
  13. Centre for Economic Policy Research (UK)
  14. EconWPA (USA)
  15. Springer Verlag
  16. International Monetary Fund
  17. Econometrica
  18. Economic Journal
  19. S-WoPEc (Sweden)
  20. Canadian Journal of Economics
  21. Iowa State Department of Economics (USA)
  22. Penn Institute for Economic Research (USA)
  23. Journal of Money, Credit and Banking
  24. Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration (Austria)
  25. UCLA Department of Economics (USA)
  26. University of California eScholarship Repository (USA)
  27. Boston College Economics (USA)
  28. Cowles Foundation, Yale University (USA)
  29. Society for Computational Economics
  30. RAND Journal / Bell Journal of Economics

RePEc emerged from the NetEc group, which received support for its WoPEc project between 1996-1999 by the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC) of the UK Higher Education Funding Councils, as part of its Electronic Libraries Programme (eLib).

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This page maintained by Kit Baum and Christian Zimmermann. Last modified 2004-05-13.