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History of Mexico-U.S. Migration 

Last update: Jun 22nd, 2009 URL: http://guides.library.yale.edu/mexmigration  Print Guide  RSS Updates

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General Reference Bibliographies for Latin America

The following are the most important hard-cover bibliographies and indexes covering the field of Latin American studies. 

 

 
 

Introduction

This subject guide helps to identify key works that examine the history of Mexico-U.S. migration available in the Yale University libraries. It contains books, articles, newspapers, primary documents, and web sites on the subject.

 

 

 

General Databases and Indexes

 

These are the most useful online databases and indexes dealing with Latin American Studies. They provide an excellent starting point for your research projects.

 

  • Handbook of Latin American Studies - An annotated bibliography of works on Latin America covering various fields in both the humanities and social sciences. Volumes have been published annually since 1936, by Harvard University Press, the University of Florida Press, and the University of Texas Press. HLAS is edited by the Hispanic Division of the Library of Congress. The printed version and the online database covers from 1936 to the present.

 

  • Hispanic-American Periodical Index - HAPI is the largest index of journal information from and 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 complete bibliographic citations to articles, book reviews, documents, original literary works, and other materials. The printed volumes and the online version of HAPI cover from 1970 to the present.

 

  • JSTOR - a project of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation for development of a digital library in support of the arts and sciences on the World Wide Web. It will eventually consist of over one hundred journal titles in the areas of anthropology, asian studies, ecology, economics, education, finance, history, mathematics, philosophy, political science, population studies, and sociology and will already contains over two million journal page images. These journals are fully searchable. For strict focus on Latin American journals, make sure to select Latin American Studies in the Limit by Discipline drop down menu.

 

  • Chicano Database - The Chicano Database identifies all types of material on Mexican-American topics and about Chicanos. The Chicano Database covers at least 1967 to the present, with more than 48,000 records. Records added since 1992 have expanded its scope to include the broader Latino experience, including Puerto Ricans, Cuban Americans, and Central American immigrants. The Chicano Database also includes the Spanish Speaking Mental Health Database, covering psychological, sociological, and educational literature. Updated quarterly.

 

  • NACLA Digital Archive - NACLA Report of the Americas (Access by IP recognition: Yale/other subscribing institutions)

 

  • Hispanic American Newspapers - Located with America's Historical Newspapers. This archive of American historical newspapers provides access to full text digitized versions of primary source material, Early American Newspapers, Series I, II, III, IV, and V. It includes titles from all 50 present states. It is produced through partnerships with the American Antiquarian Society (AAS), Library of Congress, Wisconsin Historical Society and others.

 

 

Curator for Latin America

Profile ImageCesar Rodriguez
Contact Info:
Office: Sterling Memorial Library, Rm. 316
Hours: Monday-Friday, 8:30am -5:00pm EST
Tel: (203) 432-1835
Fax: (203) 432-7231
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