THE HISTORY OF ECONOMICS WORKING PAPER SERIES
ANNOUNCEMENT AND/OR REMINDER OF THE FREE WORKING
PAPER SERIES ON THE SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH NETWORK'S (SSRN's)
ECONOMIC RESEARCH NETWORK (ERN)
ADVANTAGES
- A FREE AND OPEN FORUM
+ open to all interested parties at no cost to the
user
+ accepts papers and abstracts in all areas of history of
economics and related fields (anything that might interest
historians of economics)
- WIDE DISTRIBUTION FOR YOUR WORK
+ an opportunity to expose your work to a broad spectrum of
scholars within and beyond the history-of-economics community
+ current Statistics:
* 3,991 papers posted
* mean downloads: 181 per paper
* median downloads: 77 per paper
- A CONVENIENT ARCHIVE
+ easy to upload your papers
+ easy download other scholar's papers
+ easy to check statistics of abstract views and downloads
- EASY TO KEEP UP WITH CURRENT WORK
+ papers announced via the ERN History of Economics eJournal --
an e-mail "eJournal" with links to download abstracted papers
- NO BARRIER TO CIRCULATION IN OTHER SERIES OR SUBSEQUENT
PUBLICATION
+ despite the title "eJournal," this is simply an announcement
of working paper abstracts
+ SSRN does not take copyright nor object to publication in
other working paper series
+ posting to the SSRN website does not preclude to subsequent
publication of papers in refereed journals (in fact, most
journal articles were previously circulated in some working
paper series)
HOW TO SUBSCRIBE AND SUBMIT PAPERS
- GO TO SSRN.com AND CLICK ON Subscribe AND
FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS
- LINK YOUR PAPER TO THE ERN History of Economics eJournal
+ follow links to Economics Research Network
+ go to , ERN Subject Matter Journals
+ check box on History of Economics eJournal
MAXIMIZING YOUR VISIBILITY
- SUBMIT YOUR PAPER TO UP TO TWELVE (12) JOURNALS
+ for example, list a paper on the history of demand theory to
various Microeconomics eJournals and to the Philosophy and
Methodology of Economics eJournal
+ experience shows that history authors receive many downloads
from non-historians when papers are listed broadly
+ broad listing is good the individual author's visibility and
also is a public good that raises the the visibility of
the history of economics more generally in the wider profession
Kevin D. Hoover
Co-Editor, ERN History of Economics Journal
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Steven G. Medema
Co-Editor, ERN History of Economics Journal
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