Short answer is no. SSRN is an open-access online preprint https://www.elsevier.com/solutions/ssrn A Scopus index might only be possible for certain conference contributions, see for example: https://www.ssrn.com/index.cfm/en/irpn/ads/12132018ann005/ and I quote “The proceedings are available to all users at no charge and contain abstracts of publicly available papers presented at the conference with links to the full text in the SSRN eLibrary. ... Selected papers from the conference proceedings are published in selected WoS and Scopus indexed journals”.
Nice info you can find here: https://www.ssrn.com/index.cfm/en/ssrn-faq/ in the question ‘What is SSRN‘ you can read “While many preprint servers operate as content repositories, SSRN maximizes usage and discoverability by classifying papers into topic-based eJournals that are distributed to individual and institutional subscribers. This results in downloads and citations that SSRN aggregates into meaningful metrics”.
They don’t have an ISSN in the question ‘Does SSRN provide an ISSN or ISBN for proceedings?’ you can read “No. SSRN does not provide an ISSN or ISBN for proceedings. However, if a conference obtains an ISSN/ISBN independently of SSRN we can note this on your proceedings”.
According to ‘What is SSRN’s policy on DOIs? Are all new drafts registered with Crossref?’ they do assign a DOI “If your submission includes a full-text working paper, a DOI (Digital Object Identifier) will be added to the abstract page in the Suggested Citation area. DOIs are generated by Crossref and can take up to two weeks to appear on the abstract page. Once the DOI has been assigned, it becomes a permanent record of that preprint. Revisions have no impact on the original DOI assignment”.
Short answer is no. SSRN is an open-access online preprint https://www.elsevier.com/solutions/ssrn A Scopus index might only be possible for certain conference contributions, see for example: https://www.ssrn.com/index.cfm/en/irpn/ads/12132018ann005/ and I quote “The proceedings are available to all users at no charge and contain abstracts of publicly available papers presented at the conference with links to the full text in the SSRN eLibrary. ... Selected papers from the conference proceedings are published in selected WoS and Scopus indexed journals”.
Nice info you can find here: https://www.ssrn.com/index.cfm/en/ssrn-faq/ in the question ‘What is SSRN‘ you can read “While many preprint servers operate as content repositories, SSRN maximizes usage and discoverability by classifying papers into topic-based eJournals that are distributed to individual and institutional subscribers. This results in downloads and citations that SSRN aggregates into meaningful metrics”.
They don’t have an ISSN in the question ‘Does SSRN provide an ISSN or ISBN for proceedings?’ you can read “No. SSRN does not provide an ISSN or ISBN for proceedings. However, if a conference obtains an ISSN/ISBN independently of SSRN we can note this on your proceedings”.
According to ‘What is SSRN’s policy on DOIs? Are all new drafts registered with Crossref?’ they do assign a DOI “If your submission includes a full-text working paper, a DOI (Digital Object Identifier) will be added to the abstract page in the Suggested Citation area. DOIs are generated by Crossref and can take up to two weeks to appear on the abstract page. Once the DOI has been assigned, it becomes a permanent record of that preprint. Revisions have no impact on the original DOI assignment”.