Significant Update to History of International Law
The Limitation on Naval Armament subcollection represents a significant update to HeinOnline’s History of International Law Database.
The Limitation on Naval Armament subcollection represents a significant update to HeinOnline’s History of International Law Database.
This year’s theme at the Hein booth was “Dropping Knowledge,” which complemented our Plinko game, where attendees could play to win Hein swag after attending a demo. Join us as we rewind and recap AALL 2024, a conference surrounded by lively discussions.
For over fifty years, the Hein Company has been at the forefront of delivering top-notch documents to the research community, from reprinting to microfiche and now, with HeinOnline. Discover our comprehensive digital services in this 30-minute webinar!
Join us for a webinar featuring Altmetric, a new HeinOnline integration that follows online attention across news outlets, blogs, social media, and more, tracking thousands of online conversations to uncover the societal impact of scholarly works.
We’re pleased to announce that our William S. Hein & Co., Inc., website, which promotes our more traditional print and microfiche products, has been merged with our HeinOnline website, which features our online databases for a seamless experience.
Did you know you can take a course to better prepare yourself for researching in HeinOnline? The National Society for Legal Technology (NSLT) has just launched a new program called the Legal Research Technology Certificate.
2023 was the year of the Eras tour, Hollywood strikes, Barbenheimer, and when the Swifties learned who Travis Kelce was. Throughout it all, we remained committed to creating a stellar research experience so users could learn more about these topics.
As libraries begin to evaluate ways to bring their unique historical collections to the larger online research population, the Hein Company is here to help and share our expertise. Keep reading to learn about Hein’s digital services.
In our ongoing commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I), we have been working on updating accessibility features within our platform, and from refining user interfaces to incorporating assistive technologies, we have made substantial changes.
Exploring Race in Society, created for use in high schools and undergraduate research, is a new, free research database from EBSCO designed to encourage thoughtful discourse around important race-related topics.