Go Forth, Young Scholar: How to Use SSRN to Get Your Work Noticed
Years ago, scholars and scientists kept their research secret. New scientific discoveries had to be guarded jealously, using coded language and ciphers, for fear a competitor could steal the data and...
View ArticleWeekly Top 5 Papers – May 27, 2019
1. The Rise of Trump, the Fall of Prejudice? Tracking White Americans’ Racial Attitudes 2008-2018 via a Panel Survey by Daniel J. Hopkins (University of Pennsylvania) and Samantha Washington...
View ArticleWeekly Top 5 Papers – June 3, 2019
1. The Rise of Trump, the Fall of Prejudice? Tracking White Americansâ Racial Attitudes 2008-2018 via a Panel Survey by Daniel J. Hopkins (University of Pennsylvania) and Samantha Washington...
View ArticleAdvice to Entreprenuers
When it comes to Fatherly advice, our own SSRN thought leader, Gregg Gordon, makes insightful conversation on the ROCStars 13WHAM early-morning news program.read more...
View ArticleSSRN launching improved citations and references service, CiteRight
SSRN CiteRight citations and references service launching soon SSRN is delighted to announce that in early July weâre going to be launching a new service called CiteRight, which shows where a paper...
View ArticleWeekly Top 5 Papers – June 17, 2019
1. A Brief Introduction to the Basics of Game Theory by Matthew O. Jackson ( Stanford University â Department of Economics)read more...
View ArticleChanging the Outcome of the Future by Revisiting History
The evolution of change starts with history. A constant curiosity to learn about the way things evolve encourage conceptual ideas to new areas of thinking. This is the way SSRN was conceived in the...
View ArticleWeekly Top 5 Papers – April 29, 2019
1. Who Owns Huawei? by Christopher Balding (Fulbright University Vietnam) and Donald C. Clarke (George Washington University Law School)read more...
View ArticleWeekly Top 5 Papers – April 15, 2019
1. Time-Series Momentum: A Monte-Carlo Approach by Clemens Struck (University College Dublin) and Enoch Cheng (University of Colorado at Denver â Department of Economics)read more...
View ArticleWeekly Top 5 Papers – August 5-11, 2019
1. Who Owns Huawei? by Christopher Balding (Fulbright University Vietnam) and Donald C. Clarke (George Washington University Law School)read more...
View ArticleWeekly Top 5 Papers – August 12-18, 2019
1. A Brief Introduction to the Basics of Game Theory by Matthew O. Jackson (Stanford University – Department of Economics; Santa Fe Institute; Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR))read...
View ArticleWeekly Top 5 Papers – August 19-25, 2019
1. The Parable of the Forms by Samuel L. Bray (Notre Dame Law School)read more...
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