The team
Implicitly, the RePEc team is huge, as it encompasses all the volunteers of RePEc, including all archive maintainers as well as other helpful people. Here, we wish to give some background information about the people most involved in this undertaking.José Manuel Barrueco Cruz
JMBC is librarian at the University of Valencia in Spain. He has been involved very early in WoPEc (now defunct) and has written a large chunk of the software used for the first versions of IDEAS as well. He also built some of the initial critical mass in online papers by simply surfing the net and adding material to RePEc. He is now mostly involved in CitEc, which provides citation analysis of the works listed in RePEc.RePEc blog post about José Manuel Barrueco Cruz
Christopher F. Baum
Kit is Associate Professor of Economics at Boston College. He has been instrumental in coding scripts that produce RePEc materials from web-based working paper and journal article listings for a number of RePEc series, including some of the major commercial publishers that participate in RePEc. Kit proposed the inclusion of software components in RePEc, and manages the largest archive of software components (to which he often contributes Stata components for time series econometrics). He also does publicity for RePEc, is the proprietor of the repec.org domain, and he responds to our hotline.RePEc blog post about Kit Baum
Christian Calmès
Christian is teaching at the Université du Québec en Ouataouais and is involved in NEP coordination. RePEc blog post about Christian CalmèsKyle Fluegge
Kyle is a PhD student in Agricultural Economics at Ohio State University and he generates every week the the set of papers that are sumbitted to NEP editors.Sune Karlsson
Sune is Professor of Statistics at Orebrö University on Sweden. He runs the Swedish Working Paper Archive, SWoPEc, one of the founding members of RePEc. He is also in charge of the scripts used for updating the database contents of most RePEc participants. He is in charge of LogEc, which houses lots of statistics about RePEc, and of EconPapers. He finally maintains a set of web-based tools that help archive maintainers with the accuracy of the data they contribute.RePEc blog post about Sune Karlsson.
Thomas Krichel
Thomas is the one who started it all, before most of us even knew about the web. While Lecturer of Economics at the University of Surrey in 1993, he set up NetEc, the precursor to RePEc. He is now teaching in the library school of Long Island University. He coordinates many activities and maintains the protocols we use. He is also our liaison to related initiatives in other disciplines. He currently also maintains the software for NEP and the RePEc Author Service, in addition to being the system administrator to several machines.RePEc Blog post on Thomas Krichel
Victor Lyapounov
Sergei Parinov
Vic and Sergei are with the Russian Academy of Sciences (Siberian Branch), where they maintain a Russian mirror of RePEc called Socionet.Marco Novarese
Marco is researcher at the University of Piemonte Orientale (Italy). He directs NEP, in particular recruits and selects its editors.RePEc blog post about Marco Novarese
Volker Schallehn and Ekkehart Schlicht
Volker is Librarian and Ekkehard is Professor at the University of Munich, Germany. They co-manage the Munich Personal RePEc Archive (MPRA) that allows authors without access to an institutional RePEc archive to upload their works.RePEc blog post about Volker Schallehn
Christian Zimmermann
Christian is Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Connecticut. He is in charge of the IDEAS and EDIRC sites, monitors author registration and does some P.R. He is also in charge of the RePEc Input Service and of the monthly mailings to archive and series maintainers, editors and authors.Alumni
The following participated in critical aspects of the development of RePEc and have since moved to other projects.Bernardo Batiz-Lazo
Bernardo was closely involved with the academic aspects of NEP (our annoucement service) almost since its inception until 2007.RePEc blog post about Bernardo Batiz-Lazo
Markus Klink
Markus started collaborating while working on his Master's at the University of Mannheim, Germany. He started with the RePEc author registration.Ivan Kurmanov
Ivan graduated in Economics at Belarussian State University and has worked over ten years as software developer for RePEc. Ivan has programmed some of the "invisible" scripts used by RePEc that help us everyday in our tasks. He was also the main programmer for the RePEc author registration.RePEc Blog post on Ivan Kurmanov



