Find the best library databases for your research.
The most frequently-used databases
Full text of scholarly journals, beginning with the very first issue of each title. Primarily humanities and social sciences titles.
Leading resource for comprehensive data, research and insights spanning the global capital markets. PLEASE NOTE: Lehigh's subscription agreement with PitchBook states that the database is intended solely for academic, scholarly, or educational use. The database may not be used for personal/professional/commercial financial gain.
Helps find current articles that cite earlier work. Covers STEM, social sciences, & arts and humanities. Has an emerging sources citation index. Useful for identifying review articles Note: Web of Science generally does not include conference proceedings in search results.
The following databases are newly acquired or being evaluated for a future subscription.
Teach, learn, and perform text analysis with scholarly and primary source content available via JSTOR.
American magazine of international relations and U.S. foreign policy published by the Council on Foreign Relations.
Access to the research and advisory firm's information technology and other industry news, research reports, and business and market analysis.
More than 700 ebooks, handbooks and reference works, including MMPDS (MIL-HDBK-5). Some titles include interactive features, like equations and graphs. Lehigh does not subscribe to other Knovel collections.
Latinx Thought and Culture: The NPR Archive, 1979–1990 showcases two radio programs available in audio with transcripts: the weekly Spanish-language Enfoque Nacional and the Daily English-language Latin File. This archive includes 500 episodes (30 minutes each) of Enfoque Nacional with coverage from 1979 to 1988 and 414 episodes (15 minutes each) of Latin File from 1988 to 1990. These episodes focus on Latinx issues related to politics, sociology, human rights, the arts and more including interviews and coverage of historical events.
Over 350 first-hand, searchable newspapers printed between 1766 and 1877 in and around the southern United States during the Abolitionist, Civil War, and Reconstruction eras.
The Rolling Stone Archive covers the start of the magazine through the present day and provides insight on music, culture, and politics.