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It does not include people with uncommitted patches and many other people whose efforts have been equally important in bringing you DSpace.
Committers
The DSpace Committers Group – named because they are authorized to "commit" change to the code repository – have ultimate responsibility for the shape of the DSpace software, as well as its architecture and design going forward. They can apply code changes contributed by the larger DSpace development community to the open source platform.
- Pascal-Nicolas BECKER - Technische Universität Berlin
- Andrea BOLLINI - CINECA
- Ben BOSMAN - @MIRE
- Peter DIETZ - Longsight
- Mark DIGGORY - @MIRE
- Tim DONOHUE - DuraSpace
- Richard JONES - Cottage Labs
- Claudia JÜRGEN - University Library of Dortmund
- Bram LUYTEN - @MIRE
- Ivan MASÁR (aka helix84)
- João MELO - Lyncode
- Luigi Andrea PASCARELLI - CINECA
- Hardy POTTINGER - University of Missouri Library Systems
- Richard RODGERS - MIT Libraries
- Andrea SCHWEER - Library Consortium of New Zealand (based at the University of Waikato)
- Kim SHEPHERD - University of Auckland Library
- Kostas STAMATIS - The National Documentation Centre (EKT)
- Keiji SUZUKI
- Robin TAYLOR - University of Edinburgh
- Graham TRIGGS - Symplectic
- Jeffrey TRIMBLE - Youngstown State University
- Kevin VAN DE VELDE - @MIRE
- Mark WOOD - Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
Emeritus Committers
Emeritus Committers are those who, for one reason or another, are no longer able to contribute code to DSpace on a regular basis. They are still members of the Committers Group, but are currently acting in an advisory role within the DSpace development community. We wish to recognize the contributions each of these individuals has made to DSpace software over the years. Their code contributions and guidance have played an integral part in helping to make DSpace what it is today.
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Contributors
This is a list of all known general contributors to DSpace software. These people and institutions have contributed to at least one version of DSpace. Contributions may have been in the form of: reporting a bug, fixing a bug, providing a new feature, helping with documentation, or otherwise contributing to the software product.
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