A multidisciplinary encyclopedia of Texas history, geography and culture that includes full-text articles on people, places, events, historical themes, institutions and a variety of other topics. Articles may be searched or browsed by subject.
HarpWeek contains the full text and scanned images of Harper's Weekly from the mid-1850s to the early 1900s. This database is especially useful for researchers of U.S. history, literature, politics, business, and advertising.
HathiTrust is a large digital library bringing together materials from sources including Google Books, the Internet Archive, and other commercial digitization projects. This resource is being expanded daily and provides information on more than 10 million volumes with more than a third of these available for full text access and download (primarily books and journals published before 1923 and U.S. Government publications).
Health Source: Consumer Edition provides full-text access to approximately 80 consumer health magazines and also includes searchable full-text for health-related phamplets and health reference books. This resource covers topics such as AIDS, cancer, diabetes, drugs & alcohol, aging, fitness, nutrition & dietetics, children's health, women's health, etc.
Health Source: Nursing/Academic Edition provides access to more than 550 scholarly full-text journals, which focuses on many medical disciplines, with an emphasisis on nursing and allied health journals. This database also features the AHFS Consumer Medication Information, which includes Drug information monographs written in lay language for consumers.
Begin your legal research with HeinOnline--a collection providing the U.S. Code, U.S. Congressional Documents, the U.S. Serial Set, the U.S. Federal Legislative History Library, and the U. S. Statutes at Large. Regulatory titles include the Federal Register, the Code of Federal Regulations, and U.S. Federal agency documents, decisions, and appeals. Other assets include the U.S. Presidential Library, Foreign Relations of the United States, the Supreme Court Library, U.S. Treaties and Agreements Library, World Constitutions and other files which are always evolving. Provides the Texas State Package Constitutions, Texas Attorney General Opinions, Texas Session Laws, and State Statutes.
The HEP (high-energy physics) database allows users to search for high-energy physics related journal articles, preprints, e-prints, technical reports, conference papers, and dissertations. Created by Stanford University's Linear Accelerator Center in cooperation with Germany's Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron, the database includes citations as far back as the mid 1970s.
HeritageQuest Online is a comprehensive treasury of American genealogical sources—rich in unique primary sources, local and family histories, and finding aids. The database provides genealogical and historical sources for more than 60 countries, with coverage dating back as early as the 1700s. Users can access Census records, books, maps, city directories, and other online resources for family information.
HAPI is a source of information about Central and South America, Mexico, the Caribbean basin, the United States-Mexico border region, and Hispanics in the United States. From analyses of current political, economic, and social issues to unique coverage of Latin American arts and letters, HAPI contains citations to journal articles, book reviews, documents, original literary works, and other materials appearing in hundreds of social science and humanities journals published throughout the world.
An index (with abstracts) to journals published worldwide in many languages. Fields include all branches of world history, including, political, diplomatic, religious, economic, social, cultural, and military history. Many full-text articles are included. (NOTE: For U.S. and Canadian history, use America: History and Life.)
Historical Statistics of the United States is a database of quantitative indicators of American history. This database includes data on population, work and welfare, economics, and other government collected data. It also covers American Indians, slavery, poverty, nonprofit organizations, and data on the Confederate States of America.
This documents collection focuses on the diplomatic, legal and political maneuvering during and after World War II regarding German art looting in Europe, recovery of cultural objects dispersed during World War II, and efforts by the U.S. and other Allied Powers to prevent the secreting of Axis assets. On the topic of looted art, the documents primarily relate to negotiations and litigation for return of items to legitimate owners.
The Homeland Security Digital Library (HSDL) contains a collection of documents related to homeland security policy, strategy, and organizational management. The HSDL is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s National Preparedness Directorate, FEMA and the Naval Postgraduate School Center for Homeland Defense and Security.
The collection provides primary and secondary materials across multiple media formats and content types for each selected event, including Armenia, the Holocaust, Cambodia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Rwanda, Darfur, and more than 30 additional subjects. Resources for each topic guide users through the full scope of the event, from the historical context that made such violations possible through the international response, prosecution of perpetrators, and steps toward rebuilding.
This indexes a broad range of periodicals covering the humanities and social sciences. It also contains citations to a considerable number of book reviews.
Humanities Full Text provides complete articles from more than 300 academic journals dating back to 1995. The database covers scholarly articles, interviews, bibliographies, obituaries, fiction, drama, poetry, book reviews, and performance reviews.
Humanities International Index provides citations and abstracts for articles, essays and reviews, as well as original creative works including poems, fiction, photographs, paintings, and illustrations.