Open Access (OA) is free, unrestricted online access to research outputs.
Research is published in journals and other scholarly forms to ensure that the results are recorded and communicated to the wider community. The Library subscribes to many of these scholarly formats to provide its staff and students with access to the information they need. However, these (paid-for) ways of publishing often do not reach the whole of the research community so some, not all, research is published as Open Access.
This page offers links to useful sources of Open Access research, tools to help discover OA material during web searches, and other useful resources freely available on the web.
From Cornell University, this free, open access archive has around 2 million scholarly articles in the fields of physics, mathematics, computer science, quantitative biology, quantitative finance, statistics, electrical engineering and systems science, and economics
A community-curated online directory that indexes and provides access to high quality, open access, peer-reviewed journals
Academic open access books from hundreds of participating Publishers.
The Institution of Civil Engineers is an independent professional association for civil engineers and a charitable body in the United Kingdom. The ICE has over 93,000 members, of whom three-quarters are located in the UK, while the rest are located in more than 150 other countries.
The Royal Academy of Engineering is the UK's national academy of engineering.
Full text access to publications on Water, Sanitation and Health from the World Health Organisation (WHO).
Publisher of guidance documents in the environmental and construction sectors, many of which have been adopted as the standard for excellence in their respective areas. The Library holds many of the CIRIA reports in the collection, please use Library Search.
Many institutions (including Bristol) collect peer-reviewed author manuscripts and pre-prints from their academics and put them into digital repositories. This can provide easy open access to high quality scientific publications. You can find repositories and search their contents using the OpenDOAR directory. The University of Bristol's digital repository is Explore Bristol Research.
Google Scholar is a search engine that provides a broad search of scholarly literature. It covers multiple disciplines and sources.
Using Google Scholar off campus
To get full-text links in your Google Scholar results, you must first tell Google Scholar that you have access to the University of Bristol library subscriptions by
You will now see 'Get It @ Bristol Univ' links next to items in your Google Scholar results that you can use to access the full-text provided by library subscriptions.