Appalachian Studies connects to a variety of subject areas and disciplines, including anthropology, history, sustainability, and more. Explore these lists of databases below to find articles for your research.
A statistics portal that integrates data on media, business, finance, politics, and a wide variety of other areas of interest or markets on over 60,000 topics from 18,000 sources.
A statistics portal that integrates data on media, business, finance, politics, and a wide variety of other areas of interest or markets on over 60,000 topics from 18,000 sources.
Appalachian Journal is an interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed quarterly featuring field research, interviews, and scholarly studies of history, politics, economics, culture, folklore, literature, music, ecology, and a variety of other topics, as well as poetry and reviews of books, films, and recordings dealing with the entire region of the Appalachian mountains.
The Appalachian Journal of Law that provides a forum for issues that shape the lives of the people and communities of Appalachia as well as surrounding areas.
The Journal of Appalachian Health is a peer-reviewed, open-access journal on the health and well-being of people living in region of Appalachia—and in other resource-limited settings.
The Journal of Appalachian Studies (JAS) is a peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary journal published by the University of Illinois Press. It is the official journal of the ASA, a multi-disciplinary organization for scholars, teachers, activists, and others whose work focuses on the Appalachian region.
Published by the North Carolina Folklore Society, the North Carolina Folklore Journal features studies of North Carolina folklore and folklife, analyses of folklore in Southern literature, and articles whose rigorous or innovative approach pertains to local folklife study.
Southern Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal of the South is a peer reviewed journal published twice a year from the Southern Studies Institute. The journal is published by Northwestern State University.
The Appalachian Curator is a free, online newsletter published triannually and hosted at the University of North Carolina at Asheville. The newsletter covers information about special collections and archives that collect primary and secondary materials related to the Appalachian mountains. It is published by the Special Collections Committee of the Appalachian Studies Association.