Is here:
wyrdcon.com/2011/wyrdconcompanionbook2012.pdf
The most interesting bits for me were Nat Budin’s “Over Time: Intercon and the evolution of theatre-style larp in the Northeast” (which is good for its description of the various styles of play they’ve gone through), Lizzie Stark’s “Mad About the Techniques: Stealing Nordic Methods for Larp Design” (which both has a good sumary of what Nordic Larp is, and suggests that black boxes, workshops and formal aftercare are eminently stealable), and Aaron Vanek’s “Inside The Box, the United States Army’s Taxpayer Funded Larp”. McDonald and Kreizenbeck’s “Larp in an Interdisciplinary University Course” was also fascinating, being basically a 9-page post-mortem on why their course didn’t work (short answer: no student buy-in and not enough time).