Wikipedia:Find your source

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Wikipedia Library

Find your source

When researching with Wikipedia, you should read the cited sources – but how can you find them?

I am looking for...
Scholarly Journal Articles Books Newspaper articles More help finding sources Help using Wikipedia in Research



Academic Journal articles

Note that websites like Sci-Hub offer free and direct access to academic journal articles, but there are legal questions about their use and neither the Wikimedia Foundation nor the Wikipedia community endorses them.

Books
  • If the citation includes an ISBN, click on it to locate online versions of the book, or to find it through online databases or local or national libraries.
  • Google Books will often give access to a few pages or a snippet view.
  • See if other editions are available (although the content or pagination may differ).
  • Use WorldCat to see if your local library has a physical version of the book.
  • Request the book through your library's interlibrary loan service, if available.
  • Leverage your contacts with people studying or working in higher education facilities to get access of master's and doctoral theses from those institutions.
  • If you only need a chapter in a collective work or fragments of a research thesis, reach out to the author(s) of the work by email and ask them for a copy.

Note that websites like Library Genesis offer free and direct access to books, but there are legal questions about their use and neither the Wikimedia Foundation nor the Wikipedia community endorses them.

Newspaper articles
  • If possible, search a quote from the article to see if it has been republished elsewhere.
  • Search thousands of periodicals on the Internet Archive.
  • Search for periodical titles in the Wikipedia Library database index at The Wikipedia Library/A–Z
  • Check the list of online newspaper archives (some of which are free to access) or the list of free English newspaper sources. There are also other digitized-newspaper archives, particularly for older articles, that may be available.
  • See if either your local library or
    TWL
    provides access to the newspaper or to a database that indexes it in full text.
  • If this is an online newspaper and you see a paywall, try archiving the webpage with the article you look for in archive.today or in the Internet Archive.
  • Alternatively, install the Bypass Paywalls Clean browser extension (Firefox, Chrome) to bypass paywalls on a number of news websites.
  • See if an archived version of the article is available via a search feature on the newspaper's website.
  • Use WorldCat to see if your local library has a physical (print or
    microfilm
    ) version of the newspaper issue containing the article.
  • Request the article or the newspaper through your library's interlibrary loan service, if available.
Get help on-wiki

NOTE. Before seeking other volunteers' help, you should exhaust all other possibilities to access the content yourself. In particular, check if

the Wikipedia Library
or your institution offer access to your desired content.

  • Ask at the
    Reference Desk
  • Request a source at the
    Resource Exchange
  • Find
    shared Wikipedia community library resources