New eresource – The Economist (direct access)

We are pleased to announce that Cambridge University now provides direct access to The Economist (from 1997 to present) via the Economist website.

This highly regarded magazine is published weekly and covers many business related topics such as world events, politics, finance & economics, and science & technology.

You can also access earlier issues via the Economist Historial Archive (1843-2015) and the Databases A-Z.

From Jan 28th 2026 –

“For the first time in 54 years there are no pandas in Japan. It is a sign of worsening relations with China.
The last panda

On January 25th tearful crowds bade farewell to Xiao Xiao and Lei Lei, twin pandas at Tokyo’s Ueno Zoo. Some 110,000 people applied for 4,400 viewing spots. Many who missed out went along anyway, waving flags that read “Thank you, Xiao and Lei.”

For the first time in 54 years Japan is without pandas. In a country where they have cult status, their absence is hard to ignore. It is also emblematic of cooling relations with China. The country’s panda diplomacy dates to 1972, when China gave Japan its first pair to mark the normalisation of diplomatic ties. The animals sparked a craze. Since then, dozens have lived in Japanese zoos. “Pandas have been the face of this place for over 50 years,” says Kaneko Mikako, a deputy director of Ueno. “It’s sad that this chapter is ending.”

Officially, Xiao Xiao and Lei Lei left because their loan expired. But “if relations were good, China would have sent replacements straight away,” reckons Maeshima Kazuhiro of Sophia University in Tokyo. At the end of last year Takaichi Sanae, Japan’s prime minister, suggested Japan might intervene militarily if there were trouble over Taiwan. China furiously suspended seafood imports from Japan and restricted exports of dual-use goods. Meanwhile, South Korea looks poised to receive new pandas following a cordial meeting between the two countries’ presidents.

When—or if—pandas will return to Japan is unclear. Ms Takaichi’s stance seems to have buoyed her ratings; she is unlikely to back down over a few fluffy cubs. Among voters, too, love for pandas doesn’t always extend to China. “I adore pandas, but China scares me,” admits Matsui Saeko, a zoo visitor. One poll in 2024 showed that nearly 90% of Japanese have negative views of China. For now, though Ueno’s panda house sits empty, zookeepers hope to keep the memory of Xiao Xiao and Lei Lei alive with paw prints and replicas of their droppings.”

New eresource – Royal African Company, 1694-1743 from the Social History Archive

We are pleased to announce that researchers and students at Cambridge University now have access to Royal African Company, 1694-1743 from the Social History Archive Primary Source Series.

You can also access Royal African Company, 1694-1743 from the Social History Archive via the Databases AZ.

These records are part of The National Archives’ T 70 series, ‘Company of Royal Adventurers of England Trading with Africa and successors’. They contain the names of thousands of individuals who travelled on board the Royal African Company’s ships to and from Africa, as well as the names of those who lived and died at the numerous company forts.

The Royal African Company was a mercantile enterprise operating from 1660 until its dissolution in 1750. It was initially incorporated as the Company of Royal Adventurers Trading to Africa, before being reconstituted in 1672 as the Royal African Company of England. The company held a monopoly over trade along the West African coast. Until the 1730s, its primary business was the transatlantic slave trade, in which it played a central role, transporting enslaved African men, women, and children to British colonies. Over several centuries, this system forcibly displaced millions of people. After years of campaigning for the abolition of slavery, the slave trade was abolished in Britain in 1807, and in most British colonies in 1833.

Several records in this series contain racial categorisation for hundreds of the people mentioned in them. These terms reflect the seventeenth and eighteenth century’s practice of describing non-white European individuals as ‘black’, ‘negro’, or ‘mulatto’. The original records contain all three of the foregoing terms and, while the distinction between ‘black’ and ‘mulatto’ is generally adhered to, sometimes the terms are used interchangeably, and the same person may be described as ‘mulatto’ and ‘black’ or ’negro’ in different records. It is worth noting that not all people of colour are described as such, and sometimes the records are silent in this respect. The terms used in these documents reflect attitudes and language at the time and are now considered derogatory and offensive.

The promotional brochure for the archive is available below.

Image credit: Shipping Scene from the Collection of Philip Hollingworth (1720s) by Elisha Kirkall after Willem van de Velde the Elder from the collections of the National Gallery of Art (This object’s media is free and in the public domain.)

EconLit with Full Text – trial access until 22nd April 2026

We are pleased to announce a new trial for EconLit with full text until 22nd April 2026.

Please send us your feedback using the online form

Our current access to EconLit is to abstracts and citations. The trial access will give you access to the full text of 512 active full-text journals and magazines.

EconLit with Full Text is the full-text counterpart to EconLit, the American Economic Association’s authoritative index for economic literature.

In addition to all 1.9 million records available in EconLit, this database provides full text for key economic journals.

Subjects Include

  • Agricultural economics
  • Business economics
  • Capital markets
  • Country studies
  • Econometrics
  • Economic forecasting
  • Economic systems
  • Environmental economics
  • Financial economics
  • General economics
  • Government regulations
  • History of economic thought
  • Industrial organization
  • International economics
  • Labor and demographic economics
  • Law and economics
  • Macroeconomics
  • Microeconomics
  • Monetary theory
  • Public economics
  • Rural economics
  • Urban economics

Text from the EBSCO website for EconLit.

NEJM AI – trial access 22 Jaunuary-20 February 2026

We are pleased to announce a new trial for  NEJM AI – New England journal of medicine artificial intelligence

From the NEJM Group website for the journal:

About NEJM AI

NEJM AI, a new monthly journal from NEJM Group, explores the cutting-edge applications of artificial intelligence and machine learning in clinical medicine.”

Image by Claudio Henrique Claudio from Pixabay

Access NEJM AI – New England journal of medicine artificial intelligence via iDiscover. Full access is available from 2014 to present.

Please send us your feedback using the online form

Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy 

Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy  is now available to members of the University of Cambridge from volume 1 (2020) to present.

From the Emerald website for the journal:

“The Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy (JPIPE) publishes cutting edge work at the intersection of these two interrelated fields of study: Political institutions (systems of politics and government or structures of voluntary cooperation that resolve collective-action and coordination problems in society) and Political economy (interdisciplinary studies drawing upon economics, political science, and law to explain how political institutions, the political environment, and the economic system interact and influence each other).”

Access Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy via iDiscover.

Journal of Historical Political Economy

Journal of Historical Political Economy is now available to members of the University of Cambridge from volume 1 (2021) to present.

From the Emerald website for the journal:

“The Journal of Historical Political Economy (JHPE) publishes cutting edge work in political economy (or how political institutions, the political environment, and the economic system interact and influence each other) from an historical perspective. The journal serves a latent community that exists mostly in the Political Science and Economics communities. In recent years, a larger and larger group of political scientists have been doing quantitative-historical work that involves political economy. Over the same timespan, in Economics, economic historians have increasingly focused on political-economy topics and taken seriously the “politics” in that research. Given the boundaries that typically exist across academic disciplines, these two groups of scholars rarely talk to one another or read each other’s work. The Journal of Historical Political Economy (JHPE) will actively work to get the two groups in dialogue.”

Access Journal of Historical Political Economy via iDiscover.

Photo by Leeloo The First: https://www.pexels.com/photo/clipboard-with-statistical-data-and-digital-tablet-with-stock-market-display-on-screen-5561920/

Work in the global economy

Work in the global economy is now available to members of the University of Cambridge from volume 1 (2021) to present.

From the Bristol University Press website for the journal:

Work in the Global Economy is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed journal that promotes understanding of work, and connections to work, in all forms and dimensions. This can mean a focus on labour processes, labour markets, labour organising and labour reproduction. The editors welcome wide-ranging contributions that extend and deepen connections between all aspects of the division of labour: from the production networks that underpin the global economy, to the gendered and racial divides that shape how work is allocated and organised.

“The journal is associated with, and rooted in, the traditions of the International Labour Process Conference (ILPC) which was established in 1983. The labour process tradition reflects certain priorities, including analysis of the pathways between capitalist political economy and the changing workplace; the centrality of work and its management and regulation to economy and society; and the development of a variety of materialist understandings of those principals.

“However, like the conference, the journal adopts a pluralist approach to theory, method and discipline. We also encourage contributions from both emerging and existing scholars. Foregrounding the diverse interests that compose labour and capital in the Global South and North, the journal promotes interdisciplinary and international agendas that have broad appeal to scholars and students of the sociology of work, employment relations and human resource management, organisational studies, political economy, labour geography, labour history and development studies”

Access Work in the Global Economy via iDiscover.

Photo by Chevanon Photography: https://www.pexels.com/photo/woman-wears-yellow-hard-hat-holding-vehicle-part-1108101/

Journal of European Integration History

Journal of European Integration History  = Revue d’histoire de l’intégration européenne = Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Europäischen Integration is now available to members of the University of Cambridge from volume 12 (2006) to present.

From the Inlibra website for the journal:

“The Journal of European Integration History provides a forum for research on the European integration process in all its aspects: political, military, economic, technological, social, and cultural.

“It focusses on contributions covering specific unification projects since 1945, but also publishes works on their precursors and preparations.The purpose of the Journal is to encourage the analysis and understanding of different aspects of European integration, especially since 1945, in as wide a perspective as possible. The Journal publishes the conclusions of research on diplomatic, military, economic, technological, social and cultural aspects of integration.

“The journal is published twice a year. In addition to thematic issues, there are “open” issues, and reviews of important new publications are also published each time. The articles by an international group of authors are published in English, French or German.”

Access Journal of European Integration History via iDiscover.

Hunter Gatherer Research

Hunter Gatherer Research is now available to members of the University of Cambridge from 2002 to present.

From the Liverpool University Press website for the journal:

“Published on behalf of the International Society of Hunter Gatherer Research, Hunter Gatherer Research is an international, multi-disciplinary quarterly online publication that covers all aspects of hunter-gatherer studies, whether focusing on the present, past or future. We welcome all theoretical and empirical work, including those with clear implications for understanding hunter-gatherer communities, and studies that extend theories from hunter-gatherer research to other societies.

“The journal encompasses social and cultural anthropology, applied research, archaeology, ecology, ethnography, ethnohistory, evolutionary anthropology, genetics, indigenous rights, and linguistics, and is an indispensable resource for anyone with a research or activist interest in hunter-gatherers.”

Access Hunter Gatherer Research via iDiscover. Access from 2002 to 2012 is available under the earlier title Before farming : the archaeology and anthropology of hunter-gatherers. Full access from 2002 to present is available from either title/link.

Eighteenth Century Collections Online, Part III (ECCO III) – trial access

We are pleased to announce that Cambridge University members now have trial access to Eighteenth Century Collections Online, Part III (ECCO III).

This trial is active now and ends 10 February 2026.

Please tell us what you think about this resource using our feedback form.

Research into the transformative impact of the eighteenth century enriches our understanding of modern institutions and fosters broad cultural awareness. From its inception, ECCO was intended to connect researchers to a comprehensive digital collection of published materials from the eighteenth century. Cambridge users already have access to ECCO I and ECCO II which include over thirty-two million pages of primary source content – however, the collection was not yet complete.

Twenty years after the release of ECCO I, the discovery of new titles and new developments in scanning technology have made it possible to bring researchers rare and relevant eighteenth-century materials previously unavailable in digital form. ECCO III provides 1.7 million newly digitized pages in full colour, added perspectives from the Americas, Asia, Australia, and Europe, as well as unique materials in unusual formats and sizes, including broadsides, maps, and book covers.

Watch this video to learn more about ECCO III.

Please note ECCO Part III is cross-searchable with the other two parts via the trial link. To single out just Part III, the “archive” filter can be applied either from the advanced search page or the filters on the right of a search results page.