Various people have contributed to the content available
here. Indeed, the content available here is sometimes complementary to,
sometimes aggregating other great content sources available elsewhere on the
web.
The references database is the most sensitive since it
contains full text coming from other sources, and since it is a simple
self-contained document in a widely used format (EndNote). I will therefore
attempt to protect the best interest of the community and of the original
contributors by trying to put it under a Copyleft statute. See below for more
details.
If you believe you are a contributor to some of the content
here and have any remark (e.g. want your name to appear, or to be anonymous),
please do contact
me.
For the wealth of their contribution, a special thank must
be extended to our colleagues from Stanford University for having published such
great OT content, in particular Mark
Mortensen, Keith Rollag, and
Jan Chong. Other people
at Stanford did produce or aggregated content which should also be thanked
(Mandy, Karen, Kelley, Bilian, Maia, etc.)
I also warmly thank my colleagues at INSEAD for also sharing
their material, in particular Nicola
Dragonetti for his special help on this database. Julie
Battilana and Roxana
Barbulescu handed their own summaries of the field that fed my own
structuration. Various other doctoral students also shared their material (Julie
U., Dimo, Anna, Prashant, Manuella, Yu, Gokhan, etc.)
Copyrights
The content available on this site aggregates contents from
various sources, some of it may carry some sort of copyright. My intent in
sharing it is that it should be used in a copyleft fashion, inspired from the
open source movement.
Consider that you should treat any content from this site at
least according to such spirit, independently of any other protection that such
content may benefit on its own . To be clear, some contents cited here have a
stronger protection than granted by the copyleft statute, for instances the
abstract of citations are protected by copyrights. The author of this site does
not accept any liability for any usage that may be done of such content.
I am not a legal expert on those issues, so if someone has a strong opinion
or advice, please let me know.
Here is the notice that I put as the first entry of the
EndNote database.

This EndNote database is the result of a scholarly collective
effort distributed under an implicit CopyLeft regime adapted from GNU Public
License (see http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html for the reference). It may not
be used for commercial purpose.
Restriction of commercial and academic liability: the material
has not been formally checked and is intended as a helper. In particular,
attribution of comments/critics from apparently named contributors can be no
more than indicative, do not engage the named person, and can not be the base of
any commercial nor academic liability. If needing to use an attribution, please
check standard litterature, or check with the apparent contributor.
That notice should appear as the first entry of the database
when distributed.
List of Contributions:
* Current version (15Mar2005) assembled by Fabrice Cavarretta
during his INSEAD comps preparation. It merged the following previous major
contributions
* Various Summaries from other PhD students at INSEAD
* Nicola Dragonetti dabase from his PhD at INSEAD
* The repository of articles summaries and notes assembled by
the following people at Stanford (both WTO and GSB), with the help of their
colleagues: Jan Chong (http://www.stanford.edu/~jchong/articles/), Mark
Mortensen
(http://amadeus.management.mcgill.ca/~mark.mortensen/orgweb/summaries/mse/msewelcome.shtml),
Mandy O'Neil (EndNote database), Keith Krollag
(http://faculty.babson.edu/krollag/org_site/toc.html) |