Users of all Monmouth University provided databases are prohibited from using generative AI technologies to ingest, train, test, distribute, make publicly available, and/or generate output based on the content of these resources.
This free research database offers essential content covering important issues related to race in society today. Essays, articles, reports and other reliable sources provide an in-depth look at the history of race and provide critical context for learning more about topics associated with race, ethnicity, diversity and inclusiveness.
All Monmouth University faculty, students, and staff can now access a selection of popular digital magazines using Flipster, courtesy of Guggenheim Memorial Library.
Flipster is a next-generation digital newsstand that allows people to browse digital versions of the latest issues of popular magazines.
Magazines can be downloaded to Android phones and tablets, Apple phones and tables, and Kindle Fire tablets for offline reading anytime, anywhere.
Access to latest issues of The New Yorker, Atlantic Monthly, Consumer Reports, National Geographic, Rolling Stone and Forbes.
This collection charts the gay rights movement in America, showing the civil rights codified into law in the 20th and 21st centuries, as well as the inequalities that still exist today. All titles in this collection have been assigned one or more title-level subjects relating to their scope, and are further divided into six subcollections, whose areas of focus constitute Marriage and Family, Employment Discrimination, Military Service, AIDS and Health Care, and Public Spaces and Accommodations. A separate subcollection, Historical Attitudes and Analysis, presents books, pamphlets, reports, and more that some researchers may find offensive: viewpoints expressed in these items range from the cause of homosexuality and its alleged cures to the "problems" LGBT persons create in society.
Coverage from 1851 to present. New Monmouth University users go to http://accessnyt.com and choose Monmouth University from the menu. Use your MU email address as a username. After that, use nytimes.com to access the site.
Full text coverage from 1997 to present. Science has been at the center of important scientific discovery since its founding in 1880—with seed money from Thomas Edison. Today, Science continues to publish the very best in research across the sciences, with articles that consistently rank among the most cited in the world.