Help

  • Searches are not case sensitive and ignore diacritics.
  • Truncation, wildcards, quotation marks, and lemmatization are not supported. It is preferable to search with singular rather than plural nouns.
  • Search terms separated by a space are treated as independent search terms and are linked with the AND operator.
  • All search terms must appear somewhere in the resource description fields for a resource to be returned in the results.
  • To save a search, copy the url from the results page or use the export button to download the results as a JSON file.
  • How can I find photograhs about cuba in the 1950s?
  • Try searching: Cuba Photographs 1950s
  • How can I find the most comprehensive set of free resources on slavery?
  • Try searching: slavery
  • How can I find freely available online encyclopedias, dictionaries, etc. to support my reference work?
  • Try searching: reference
  • How can I find websites including oral histories related to Latin America, the Caribbean, Latinx, and Iberia?
  • Try searching: oral histories
  • How can I find ephemera materials focusing on the Caribbean?
  • Try searching: ephemera Caribbean
  • Resources with full content.
  • Resources with valuable but partial online digital content. Example: The PALABRA Archive at the Library of Congress
  • Resources that are part of a larger project but include a distinctive stable link to content within our scope. Example: World Digital Library : Latin America and the Caribbean
  • Resources that include some content of our interest such as international organizations, governmental agencies, think tanks etc. but they do not provide a distinctive stable link within our scope.
  • Free does not always mean open access. This applies to resources that require free registration in order to access their content.

Resources are cataloged according to the LACLI Guidelines.

Metadata fields include Format, Language, Geographic Area, Time Period, Subjects, among others. The content of most fields is in English. The fields presented in their original language are Resource Title, Country, Language, Institutional Host, and Creators. Subject access is available using the Hispanic American Periodicals Index (HAPI) Subject Headings, which is a trilingual controlled vocabulary based on Library of Congress Subject Headings and translated into Spanish and Portuguese.

Yes! Please use this form to submit your favorite online resources or a project you've developed.