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Announcements

New Resources by Gale!

by Despina Tsilimagkou on 2021-04-05T12:03:00+03:00 | 0 Comments

The library is pleased to announce a new subscription to Gale Reference Complete providing access to the following Gale databases:

  • Gale Academic OneFile : It provides access to 17,000 journals, over 11,000 peer-reviewed and 8,000 full-text titles. It includes full-texts from The Economist (1988 to present), The New York Times (1985 to present) and other key newspapers such as The Times and The Financial Times. Podcasts and transcripts from NPR and CNN are also available.

  • Gale General OneFile  : It enables students to search by subject across a broad but curated list of general interest publications, supplementing knowledge gained from peer-reviewed journals with insights from mainstream press, trade and industry publications globally. Providing a solid base of general references, it offers users access to over 14,500 titles, 9,000 full-text and 3,700 peer reviewed journals, hundreds of newspapers including current content from National Public Radio programs (from 1990 to present) and links to thousands of videos from NYTimes.com and Associated Press.

  • Gale OneFile: News : It supplements the current full-text newspaper content in Gale Academic OneFile with close to 1200 national and regional newspaper titles (active and full-text) including Al Jazeera (Qatar), Bangkok Post, Gulf News and a wealth of local UK titles. It keeps users informed with regular updates to 2,300 global newspapers, radio and TV broadcasts and transcripts.

  • Gale Primary Sources: Archives Unbound : It comprises more than 13 million pages of historical documents, with coverage from the medieval period to the new millennium. Varying in document types, the broad options include government documents, monographs, newspapers and correspondence sources from major research libraries, including the British Library, U.S. and U.K. National Archives and the Library of Congress. Supporting multi-disciplinary research in history and political science, these 260 unique primary source collections have particular research area strengths in Britain and Empire; European Colonialism in Africa and Asia; Irish History; Nazism and the Holocaust; 20th century politics and society in the Gulf and North Africa; Arab/Israeli relations; US Foreign policy, FBI files and Civil Rights movements.

All resources are available from on- and off-campus via Discovery and the A-Z Databases list.

For more questions, please contact us.


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