Digital Scholarship
The Anne Finch Digital Archive is an open-access resource that complements the two-volume print edition from Cambridge University Press: The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea, edited by Jennifer Keith (University of North Carolina at Greensboro) and Claudia Thomas Kairoff (Wake Forest University).
The Digital Library on American Slavery is an expanding resource compiling various independent online collections focused upon race and slavery in the American South, made searchable through a single, simple interface.
The Encyclopedia of UNCG History is a project of the Martha Blakeney Hodges Special Collections and University Archives. You can search the Encyclopedia via search box or view an alphabetical listing of all entries using the Browse Entries option.
NC DOCKS is a cooperative effort to make the scholarly output of the University of North Carolina System more available to the world. With eight institutional participants, NC DOCKS includes many full text articles, audio recordings, dissertations, and other formats. All materials are freely available to scholars and researchers world-wide.
The mission of the North Carolina Literary Map is to highlight the literary heritage of the state by connecting the lives and creative work of authors to real (and imaginary) geographic locations.
The University Libraries is now partnering with UNC Chapel Hill’s Odum Insititute to host research data. This partnership is one option to fulfill data management plan requirements that are now commonly being mandated by granting agencies.
The University Libraries host and run an instance of Open Journal Systems (OJS), a journal management and publishing system. With OJS, the Libraries can help support faculty who wish to publish online journals, newsletters, technical reports, and other publications.