It sounds like you had a great conference. I've read at least 50 great abstracts. It is great to see granular research of value. Since the Aoir database rarely notes that a paper exists for download (and those that exist are only for conference members - or that is what it says), I'll repeat my offer to help you get feedback on your papers from the mixed practitioner/researcher DoWire network of 2750 folks in 80 countries. Drop me a note if you have a recent e-democracy, online community, e-politics, e-government article online: clift@publicus.net With the American Political Science annual conference you can freely cruise through their papers and download - should their conference papers be easier to access then yours? I would hope with Internet-oriented researchers that your orientation would be toward organized information sharing. The tagging and blogging is great, but if you hope to impress more than your peers or advisers I encourage you to share your hard work with those who might do things differently and better based on your insights. Cheers, Steven Clift Steven Clift - http://publicus.net - Reply to: clift@publicus.net Join DoWire: http://dowire.org E-Democracy: http://e-democracy.org P.S. At APSA go to: http://convention2.allacademic.com/index.php?cmd=apsa05 Try searching the full text or abstracts for "web or internet or blogging or e-government or e-democracy or online."