Published by the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP), AHFS Drug Information is a leading source of evidence-based drug information available.
Eighteenth Century Collections Online (ECCO) is a vast eighteenth-century library at your desktop—a fully text-searchable corpus of books, pamphlets and broadsides in all subjects printed between 1701 and 1800. It currently contains over 180,000 titles amounting to over 32 million fully-searchable pages.
For over the past 200 years, the burning of fossil fuels, such as coal and oil, and deforestation, have caused the concentrations of heat-trapping "greenhouse gases" to increase significantly in our atmosphere. This collection documents the U.S. response to the threat posed by climatic change and global warming. The research behind the studies, reports, and analyses represents an exhaustive review of the facts, causes, and economic and political implications of a phenomenon that threatens every region of the world.
Now in its 52nd Edition, The Official Museum Directory is known industry-wide as the authority for reliable museum data. This one-of-a-kind reference is the one-stop source for museum professionals, students, library patrons, and researchers who need comprehensive information on those institutions committed to celebrating and preserving the world’s culture, art, music, nature, and history.
Part 1 is the complete series of State Papers Domestic for the Tudor era, encompassing every facet of early modern government including social and economic affairs, law and order, religious policy, crown possessions and intelligence.
Part II reunites the Foreign, Scotland, Borders and Ireland papers with the Registers (‘Minutes’) of the Privy Council for the whole of the Tudor period. Together they give comprehensive coverage of international diplomacy, colonial policy, commercial and maritime law, trade and industry and naval and military policy. These documents reveal the inner workings of the Tudor court but also those of its foreign allies and enemies.
The 17th century was a period of revolution and instability with civil wars (1642-6, and 1648), the trial and execution of one king, Charles I (1649), and the forced abdication and exile of another, James II, in the 'Glorious Revolution' (1688-9). A Stuart king, James II, was replaced by a Dutch Stadtholder, William of Orange, who ruled as William III.
Part IV contains correspondence between Britain and the countries of Europe in the 17th century. Some of these countries have lost their own collections from this period thus increasing the rarity and value of these British State Papers for not just British history but European.
When the nineteenth century opened in Britain and the United States, it would not have been unusual to think that mainstream Christianity had made its peace with eighteenth-century rationalism and Enlightenment thought. In New England, the location of almost all of the elite American colleges, a Unitarian Deism had become the norm among faculty and students.
Spanning the presidential administrations of Ronald Reagan to Barack Obama, The International War on Drugs documents the United States Government's response to the global illicit drug trade.
Now when accessing Ebsco databases you will automatically have a MyEbsco account created using your Gonzaga credentials through our Single Sign On (SSO) configuration.
On campus guests of the university can access our Ebsco resources via the "On Campus Guest Access" links on each Ebsco resource on the Databases A to Z list.
Connecting Google Scholar to the Foley collection
Would you like to access Google Scholar content through Foley Library? Here is how!
Limit to peer-reviewed journals. That's what your professors expect you to use in your research.
Narrow your search.Add a date range, keyword, etc.
Expand keywords with truncation: bicycl* (retrieves bicycle, bicycles, bicycled, bicycling).
Read the abstract of an article to find out if it really is beneficial to your research.
Ask for help:http://researchguides.gonzaga.edu/reference. Librarians can suggest the best databases for your topic, help you with your search strategy, and answer questions about using library resources.
Database Searching Tips from Foley Librarians
LOOK AT THE WHOLE SCREEN FIRST. Before you start searching in an unfamiliar database, look at the whole search screen first. What search tools are available to you? Are there check boxes, limiters, subject headings, indexes, a link to get help?
KEEP IT SIMPLE.Search with only the most necessary keywords from your topic and don't use all of them at once. Example (keywords in italics): What are the effects of global warming on the animals in national parks? You might want to get more specific and search for: climate change, wildlife, Yellowstone.
FIND A FEW (2-3) RELEVANT ARTICLES.You don't need to start with 20 articles; find a couple of very relevant ones and read those first.You may discover other topics, authors or references or you may decide to change your topic.
SEARCH USING SUBJECT HEADINGS. Browse a database’s Thesaurusor list of Subject Terms to find subject headings relevant to your topic OR use a subject heading link in an article record to search for more articles with that heading. The Using Subject Headings tutorial below explains it better.