.
.
UNITED STATES: GOVERNMENT: CONGRESS :
GOVERNMENT: PUBLICATIONS: CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS:
Online Sources for Congressional Hearings and Information About Them
.
.
WEBBIB1516
.
.
United States congressional hearing
From Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_congressional_hearing
Example of a legislative hearing, where a panel of
experts is summoned to inform policy making.
The picture is of a 2013 House of representatives
committee on Foreign Affairs hearing on North
Korea’s Nuclear Program
Congressional hearings are the principal formal
method by which committees collect and analyze
information in the early stages of legislative policymaking.
.
Whether confirmation hearings — a procedure unique
to the Senate — legislative, oversight, investigative, or a
combination of these, all hearings share common
elements of preparation and conduct. Hearings usually
include oral testimony from witnesses and questioning
of the witnesses by members of Congress.
George B. Galloway termed congressional hearings a
goldmine of information for all the public problems of
the United States.[1] A leading authority on U.S.
government publications has referred to the published
hearings as “the most important publications originating
within Congress.”[2] The Senate Library in a similar vein
noted “Hearings are among the most important
publications originating in Congress.”[3] Hearings were
not published generally until the latter part of the
19th Century, except some early hearings (generally of
special investigative committees) were published in the
series that are part of the Serial Set. Published hearings
did not become available for purchase from the United
States Government Printing Office until 1924 and were
not distributed to depository libraries until 1938.[4]
Unlike the documents and reports that are compiled in
the Serial Set “hearings do not constitute a real series”[3]
although in the modern era a trend toward uniformity of
numbering has resulted in all Senate hearings and prints
for each Congressional Session (commencing with the
98th Congress in 1983) being assigned a unique numerical
designation (in the style of what one scholar dubbed a
“combination code”)[5] published on the cover and title
page (e.g. S. HRG. 110-113; S. PRT. 110-13). A growing
number of House Committees are assigning numerical or
alphabetical designations for their publications
(e.g. 110-35, 110-AA).
.
The Law Library of Congress in a collaborative pilot project
with Google is undertaking the digitizing of the Library’s
entire collection of printed hearings (constituting
approximately 75,000 volumes). As of 2010 three collections
(on the decennial Census, FOIA and Immigration) have been
selectively compiled as a test. It is hoped the project will
eventually provide full-text access of the entire collection
which will be posted online by Google and the Library.[6]
ProQuest offers subscriptions to a database of digitized
hearings (published and unpublished) covering 1824 to
the present.[7]
Contents
1 Types of hearings
1.1 Legislative hearings
1.2 Oversight hearings
1.3 Investigative hearings
1.4 Confirmation hearings
1.5 Field hearings
2 Subpoenas and depositions
3 Closing a hearing
4 Source
5 References
6 External links
.
.
Capitol Hearings
A Service of C-SPAN
http://www.capitolhearings.org
Home
U.S. House of Representatives
http://www.capitolhearings.org/
U.S. Senate
http://www.capitolhearings.org/
THOMAS Legislation Search
C-SPAN.org
U.S. Senate Committees
Standing Committees
Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry
Committee on Appropriations
Committee on Armed Services
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation
Committee on Energy and Natural Resources
Committee on Environment and Public Works
Committee on Finance
Committee on Foreign Relations
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Committee on Rules and Administration
Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship
Committee on the Budget
Committee on the Judiciary
Committee on Veterans’ Affairs
Joint Committees
Joint Committee on Printing
Joint Committee on Taxation
Joint Committee on the Library
Joint Economic Committee
Special, Select, and Other Committees
Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe
Committee on Indian Affairs
Select Committee on Ethics
Select Committee on Intelligence
Special Committee on Aging
United States Senate Caucus on International Narcotics Control
.
U.S. House Committees
Standing Committees
Committee on Agriculture
Committee on Appropriations
Committee on Armed Services
Committee on Education and Labor
Committee on Energy and Commerce
Committee on Financial Services
Committee on Foreign Affairs
Committee on Homeland Security
Committee on House Administration
Committee on Natural Resources
Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
Committee on Rules
Committee on Science and Technology
Committee on Small Business
Committee on Standards of Official Conduct
Committee on the Budget
Committee on the Judiciary
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure
Committee on Veterans’ Affairs
Committee on Ways and Means
Joint Committees
Joint Committee on Printing
Joint Committee on Taxation
Joint Committee on the Library
Joint Economic Committee
Special, Select, and Other Committees
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence
Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming
.
.
House Committee Hearings and Meetings Video
https://www.congress.gov/committees/video
- Agriculture
- AppropriationsLIVE
- Armed Services
- Budget
- Education and the Workforce
- Energy and Commerce
- Ethics
- Financial Services
- Foreign Affairs
- Homeland Security
- House Administration
- Judiciary
- Natural Resources
- Oversight and Government Reform
- Rules
- Science, Space, and Technology
- Small Business
- Transportation and Infrastructure
- Veterans’ Affairs
- Ways and Means
.
.
United States Government Printing Office
CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS
A hearing is a meeting or session of a Senate, House, joint,
or special committee of Congress, usually open to the public,
to obtain information and opinions on proposed legislation,
conduct an investigation, or evaluate/oversee the activities
of a government department or the implementation of a
Federal law. In addition, hearings may also be purely
exploratory in nature, providing testimony and data about
topics of current interest. Most congressional hearings are
published two months to two years after they are held.
.
Not all congressional hearings are available on FDsys. Whether or
not a hearing is disseminated on FDsys depends on the committee.
GPO continues to add hearings as they become available during
each session of Congress. If a congressional hearing is not listed in
FDsys, it is not available electronically via GPO at this time.
NOTE: If a committee has not made a hearing available electronically
via GPO for a specific Congress, the committee’s name will not appear
in the browse list until a hearing for that committee is made available in
FDsys. Committee publications may also be browsed via the FDsys
congressional committee browse page.
FDsys contains selected House and Senate hearings for the 105th
Congress (1997-98) forward. The House and Senate appropriations
hearings for fiscal year 1998 forward are also included. Documents are
available as text and PDF. Graphics, including scanned images of
camera ready copy are omitted from the ASCII text version but are
contained in the PDF files.
About the Congressional Hearings.
.
.
The Library of Congress > Law Library > Find Legal Resources >
Collections > Congressional Hearings
https://www.loc.gov/law/find/hearings.php
Find Legal Resources |
Global & Comparative Law Resources |
Legislative Resources |
Databases & eResources |
Collections |
Legal Blawg Archive |
Recommended Resources by Topic
The Law Library of Congress contains approximately 75,000
volumes of printed Congressional Hearings. Committees hold
hearings for a variety of purposes. Testimony is received from
members of Congress, officials of the executive branch, policy
experts, interest groups and sometimes the general public on
legislative proposals, the functioning of government programs,
subjects of controversy, and matters under investigation.
The Law Library’s hearing collection is a rich resource for anyone
interested in the history of issues that still face our country today.
As part of the Law Library’s transition to the digital future, a
collaborative pilot project was undertaken with Google, Inc., to
digitize the entire collection and make it freely available to
Congress and the world. Three collections have been selectively
compiled to provide users with a test experience:
Freedom of Information/Privacy
These selected Hearings, presented as Adobe Acrobat PDF files,
are samples of a larger group that will be digitized and made
available as a result of this project. Ultimately, both the Library
and Google will provide full-text access to the larger group of
Hearings.
.
The digital copies of the Hearings resulting from this project
reflect the primary objectives of the digitization project—to
produce text-readable versions of the Hearings and to make
them available as quickly as possible. There will be occasional
duplicate or missing pages, and there are some instances in
which the text is blurry or partially cut off. In general, however,
the resulting text is clean, the pages bright, and the content
complete and highly readable. In fact, as has been noted by
many involved in the review process, the digital versions of the
Hearings are often more legible than the original paper copies.
For each Hearing, all of the text is searchable within the PDF –
either using an Adobe product or any application that can index
or search text within a PDF.
.
Going into the pilot, the Library recognized that quality limitations
could result from the high-speed scanning process, but considered
that an acceptable trade-off when weighed against access to the
rich and vast legislative material contained within these volumes.
We hope you’ll agree as you have the opportunity to search and
read the content, but we would like to hear your comments –
positive or negative. You’ll note a short form associated with
each volume where you can rate the quality of the image, value
of the digital copy, and record any general comments you may
have.
Last Updated: 06/03/2015
.
.
ABOUT CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS
https://www.gpo.gov/help/about_congressional_hearings.htm
.
A hearing is a meeting or session of a Senate, House,
joint, or special committee of Congress, usually open
to the public, to obtain information and opinions on
proposed legislation, conduct an investigation, or
evaluate/oversee the activities of a government
department or the implementation of a Federal law.
In addition, hearings may also be purely exploratory in
nature, providing testimony and data about topics of
current interest. Most congressional hearings are
published two months to two years after they are held.
.
Note: Not all congressional hearings are available on FDsys.
Whether or not a hearing is disseminated on FDsys
depends on the committee.
.
FDsys contains contain select House and Senate hearings
for the 104th Congress (1995-96) forward. The House and
Senate appropriations hearings for fiscal year 1998 are
included. Additional hearings for previous congresses are
also available. Documents are available as ASCII text and
Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF) files. Graphics,
including scanned images of camera ready copy are omitted
from the ASCII text version but are contained in the PDF files.
FDsys continues to add hearings irregularly as they become
available during each session of Congress.
.
.
Congressional Hearings
National Archives
https://www.archives.gov/congress/hearings.html
.
Library Resources for Administrative History:
Congressional Hearings and Committee Prints
http://www.archives.gov/research/alic/reference/
admin-history/congressional-hearings.html
OR
Library Resources for Administrative History
http://www.archives.gov/research/alic/reference/admin-history/index.html
Title/Name Index
http://www.archives.gov/research/alic/reference/
admin-history/docs-by-title.html
OR
Date Index
http://www.archives.gov/research/alic/
reference/admin-history/docs-by-date.html
OR
Among the most valuable Government publications are the hearings of the various committees of Congress. Of special importance to the archivist are those held before the House Appropriations Committee on the budgets of the various Federal departments and agencies. These often contain detailed information on the organization and work of the agency involved, provided to justify its financial requests. Of the various classes of hearings, those most significant for administrative history are the appropriation hearings and hearings concerned with the investigation and improvement of Government operations.
Committees regularly hold hearings on particular legislation over which they have jurisdiction or on matters that fall within their general oversight responsibility. Transcripts of the proceedings are printed by committees as hearings publications and, for the most part, made available to the public.
Congressional committee prints are publications that individual congressional committees prepare or commission primarily to aid them in doing their work. In contrast to the public reporting function of hearings, reports, and documents, committee prints historically have been publications produced primarily for the internal use of congressional committees themselves. Commonly, prints contain background studies, bill drafts, or statute compilations to aid the committee’s consideration of legislation, or they present analytical information or statistical data required by the committee for the exercise or its oversight functions. Usually published in limited edition, most committee prints generally were considered private committee documents and were distributed inconsistently, if at all. As a result, most prints became “fugitive” documents as soon as they were published. Committee prints were usually not announced in standard catalogs and bibliographies. Jurisdictional interests of congressional committees encompass an extremely broad range of economic and social subject areas and the breadth of topics covered by the committee prints reflects that diversity.
1833-1969
Congressional Information Service. CIS U.S. Congressional Hearings Index1833-1969. Washington: Congressional Information Service, Inc.; 1980-1985.8 parts in 42 volumes.
REF Z1223. Z7C5. part, volume
See also: Congressional Masterfile 1
Index provides detailed, comprehensive access to more than 40,000 titles published from the 1830’s through 1969. The CIS Hearings Index provides access to source documents through a number of individual indexes and a detailed Reference Bibliography.
Entries in the Index by Subject and Organizations and the Index by Personal Names direct users to appropriate entries in the Reference Bibliography, and to corresponding publications. TheReference Bibliography gives full bibliographic information for publications. It also includes a list of witness names and affiliations, page locations of testimony, assigned subject descriptors, and a brief annotation. An Index by Bill Numbers lists numbers of House and Senate bills and resolutions on which hearings were held, with corresponding accession numbers for the hearings. Also included are indexes by titles, report and document numbers, and Superintendent of Document Classification numbers. This work is updated by the CIS Index.
1823-1964
Congressional Information Service. CIS Index to Unpublished U.S. Senate Committee Hearings, 18th Congress-88th Congress, 1823-1964. Washington: Congressional Information Service, Inc.; 1986.5 volumes.
REF KF. 40. C5. volumes 1-5
See also: Congressional Masterfile 1
This is a guide to the unpublished Senate hearings contained in Record Group 46. Many hearings that were initially held in executive session were never published. Thus, a large number of the unpublished transcripts in this collection are from closed, executive session meetings. (For example, hearings on nominations and committee business meetings to consider pending legislation were frequently held in executive session.) In addition to the holdings in RG 46, unpublished hearings located at Senate offices and other institutions are included in this guide. All of the hearings indexed are available on microfiche from CIS. Senate Resolution 474 provides for the opening of “investigative files” which concern national security or individual privacy only after fifty years. Pursuant to this provision, the files of the Subcommittee on Internal security [Committee on Judiciary] and the Permanent Investigations Subcommittee [Committee on Government Operations] were excluded from this collection.
Read the Users Guide, p. viii-x, for an explanation of Senate restrictions.
The hearings are indexed by subject and organization, personal name, title, and bill numbers.
This work supplements the CIS Hearings Index.
1965-1968
Congressional Information Service. CIS Index to Unpublished U.S. Senate Committee Hearings, 18th Congress-88th Congress, 1965-1968. Washington: Congressional Information Service, Inc.; 198?.
REF
See also: Congressional Masterfile 1
This work updates the CIS Index to Unpublished Senate Hearings 1823-1964 and supplements theCIS Hearings Index.
1833-1936
Congressional Information Service. CIS Index to Unpublished U.S. House of Representatives Committee Hearings 1833-1936. Washington: Congressional Information Service, Inc.; 1988.2 volumes.
REF KF40. C54. 1988. volumes I-2/NAR-OCLC 18830033
See also: Congressional Masterfile 1
This is a guide to the unpublished House hearings contained in Record Group 233. Provisions of House Resolution 288, passed by the House in 1953 (83d Congress) affected the scope, content and size of the CIS collection. H. Res 288 closed all transcripts of both executive session and public hearings, together with all other records of House committees, immediately upon transmittal the to the National Archives. They remain closed for fifty years. However, records remain closed if the Clerk of the House determines, in the words of H. Res. 288, “that the use of such records would be detrimental to the public interest.” Although H. Res. 288 opens records “which have previously been made public,” such records may be closed if the Clerk determines that their availability is inconsistent with the “rights and privileges” of the House of Representatives.
Due to H. Res. 288 and the procedures adopted by the Office of the Clerk of the House, CIS was not able to include transcripts of less than fifty years in age, even when recorded as hearings held in open session, and were similarly unable to film many executive session hearings regardless of age. Read the Users Guide, p. viii-x, for an explanation of House restrictions.
All of the indexed hearings are available on microfiche from CIS. The hearings are indexed by subject and organization, personal name, title, and bill number. This work supplements the CIS Hearings Index
1937-1946
Congressional Information Service. CIS Index to Unpublished U.S. House of Representatives Committee Hearings 1937-1946. Washington: Congressional Information Service, Inc.; 1990. 2 volumes.
REF KF40. C54. 1990. volumes I-2/NAR-OCLC 22753973
See also: Congressional Masterfile 1
This updates the CIS Index to Unpublished House Hearings 1833-1936 and supplements the CIS Hearings Index. Read the Users Guide, p. viii- x, for an explanation of House restrictions.
1947-1954
Congressional Information Service. CIS Index to Unpublished U.S. House of Representatives Committee Hearings 1947-1954. Washington: Congressional Information Service, Inc.; 1992. 2 volumes.
REF KF40. C54. 1990. volumes I-2/NAR-OCLC 22753973
See also: Congressional Masterfile 1
This updates the CIS Index to Unpublished House Hearings 1937-1946 and supplements the CIS Hearings Index.
1830-1969
Congressional Information Service. CIS U.S. Congressional Committee Prints Index 1830-1969.Washington: Congressional Information Service, Inc.; 1980. 5 volumes.
REF Z1223.ZYCe. volumes 1-5
See also: Congressional Masterfile 1
Detailed, five-volume index covers an estimated 15,000 committee prints issued during 1830-1969. Many of the prints have never been cataloged, and few have been listed in the Monthly Catalog. AReference Bibliography presents full bibliographic data and lists assigned subject and author indexing terms for each committee print. The Index by Subject and Names is an alphabetical index to the basic subject matter of publications, the names of individuals and organizations as subjects and authors, the names of issuing committees, the names of bills and public laws, and selected publications and information types. There are separate indexes for title, bill number, and the Superintendent of Documents Classification number. This work is updated by the CIS Index.
1970-to date
Congressional Information Service. CIS Index. Washington: Congressional Information Service, Inc.; 1970 to date. Monthly with annual cumulative bound index and abstract volumes; periodic cumulative indexes.
REF KF49. 621. (year)
See also: Congressional Masterfile 2
A monthly index/abstract of all current Congressional publications [Documents, Hearings, Prints, Reports, Executive Reports, Treaty Documents], cumulated annually. There is a Five- Year Cumulative Index (1970-1974) and four Four-Year Cumulative Indexes, 1975-1978; 1979-1982; 1983-1986; and 1987-1990. CIS Index is issued in two parts: a Summary Section and an Index Section. The Summary Section publishes an abstract containing full bibliographic data, a summary of the publication’s nature and subject matter, and an outline of specific contents.
Individual testimony and insertions are abstracted and indexed. The main index is by subject and name. Five supplementary indexes are included: Index of Titles, Bill Numbers, Report Numbers, Document Numbers, and Committee and Subcommittee Chairmen. Each CIS annual cumulative issue includes an abstract and legislative history of each Public Law enacted during the year covered by that Annual.
Morehead, p. 85-87.
.
.
How to Cite US Government Documents in MLA, APA Citation Style:
Congressional Hearings
Cornell University Library
http://guides.library.cornell.edu/c.php?g=134360&p=881207
.
Federal News Service
Transcripts
Congressional Hearings
http://www.fednews.com/transcriptsmore.php?op=co
.
Quick Start:
Congressional Hearings
Digital Collection:
Unpublished Hearings
ProQuest LibGuides Research Guide
http://proquest.libguides.com/quick_start_hearings/unpublished
Additional Topics Covered in This Guide
About Hearings
http://proquest.libguides.com/c.php?g=86940&p=559087
Searching Hearings
http://proquest.libguides.com/quick_start_hearings/searching
Famous (Celebrity) Witnesses
http://proquest.libguides.com/quick_start_hearings/famouscelebs
Famous Attorneys
http://proquest.libguides.com/quick_start_hearings/famousattorneys
Supreme Court Nominations
http://proquest.libguides.com/quick_start_hearings/supremecourt
STEM Resources
http://proquest.libguides.com/quick_start_hearings/stem
Webinars
http://proquest.libguides.com/c.php?g=86940&p=1322179
.
.
Committee Hearings
University of Chicago Library
http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/law/db/ref/hearings.html
.
The Library of Congress >> Researchers >> Main Reading Room >>
Congressional Committee Hearings
https://www.loc.gov/rr/main/govdocsguide/Hearings.html
Finding Congressional Committee Hearings Online:
Online/Subscription – On site use only
- Public Documents Masterfile— Coverage: 1700s-
- ProQuest Congressional— Coverage: Index and full text hearings: 1824-
- LLMC Digital(Law Library Microform Consortium Digital Collection) — Coverage: Searchable full text hearings: 1873-2007
- ProQuest Legislative Insight— Selective Coverage: 1929-
Online/Free – Access Anywhere
- Internet Archive –Coverage varies
- Google books –Coverage varies
- HaithiTrust–Coverage varies
- Browse Hearings through GPO’s Federal Digital System (FDsys)
Coverage: 91stCongress, 1969- - Search Hearings through GPO’s Federal Digital System (FDsys)
Coverage: 105thCongress, 1997- - House of Representatives Committee sitesand Senate Committee
sites often provide summaries or transcripts of Congressional hearings available on their websites.
Finding Congressional Hearings on Video:
- C-Span Video Library All C-SPAN programs since 1987 can be viewed online for free.
Finding Congressional Hearings on Streaming Audio:
- Real time audio at C-Span –This site also provides a schedule of current and upcoming hearings.
Finding Congressional Hearings in paper:
- Main Reading Room–Congressional Hearings are available in the Main Reading Room Reference Collection for 1943-2006. These are organized first by Congress (e.g. 107thCongress), then by House or Senate and finally, alphabetically, by the name of the Congressional committee (e.g. Agriculture, Appropriations).
- Law Library Collection.— Coverage: 1880-
Finding Congressional Hearings in Microform
- CIS US Congressional Committee Hearings Index
KF40 .C56
Indexes available in LAW, MRR, N&CPRR
Microfiche available in: LAW
LAW microfiche call number: 91/10000 (K)
Coverage: 1833-1969 - Congressional Information Service Index
KF49 .C62
Indexes available in LAW, MRR, N&CPRR
Microfiche availble in: LAW
LAW microfiche call number: (o) 91/10017 LL RR
Coverage: 1970- - CIS Index to Unpublished US House of Representatives Committee Hearings
KF40 .C54
Indexes available in Law, MRR
Microfiche available in: LAW
LAW microfiche call number: 90/10008
Coverage: 1833-1968 - CIS Index to Unpublished US Senate Committee Hearings
KF40 .C55
Indexes available in LAW, MRR and N&CPRR
Microfiche available in: LAW
LAW microfiche call number: 91/10005
Coverage: 1823-1976 - Government Depository Collection
The Newspaper and Current Periodical Reading Room keeps the latest ten years of Congressional Committee Documents in print or on microfiche as part of the U.S. Federal Government Depository Collection. A Superintendent of Documents number (SuDoc) is necessary in order to request these. GPO’s Catalog of U.S. Government Publications can help you find the SuDoc numbers.
What is a Congressional Hearing?
[Dr. Mark Mills drawing diagrams on a blackboard during testimony
before the Congressional Joint Atomic Energy Committee hearings
on atomic radioactive fallout]
Negative: film, 1957
Prints and Photographs Division
Reproduction Number:
LC-U9-864A-4
.
.
PROQUEST CONGRESSIONAL
The database, available to members of institutions that subscribe, usually public,
academic and law libraries have full text documents available to them
from the Proquest Congressional database.
This is the menu of document types in this database:
Document Types
Select all
Legislative Histories 1969-PresentLegislative History
Go to Legislative Insight For enhanced legislative histories
Bills & Laws 1987-Present
Vote Report 1987-Present
Committee Prints & Misc. Publications 1817-Present
Committee Prints
Congressional Record Daily Edition 1985-Present
Congressional Record Daily
CRS Reports 1916-Present
Hearings 1824-Present
House & Senate Documents 1817-Present
House and Senate Documents Help House & Senate Reports 1817-Present
House and Senate reports Help Serial Set 1789-PresentSerial
Serial Set
Maps 1789-Present
For those affilliated with a college or public library that provides access to databases,
check their list of databases to see if Proquest Congressional is on their list of
databases provided.
.
.
This search
“freedom of information” or foia
Leads to 15,891 Results
Leading to records like this
The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA): Background, Legislation, and Policy Issues
CRS ReportDate: January 23, 2014Citation: CRS-2014-GVF-0033Length: 30 p.
Discusses history and implementation of the Freedom of Information Act,
which guarantees public access to existing, identifiable, unpublished, executive
branch agency records. Presents FOIA statistics for FY2012, summarizes FOIA
administration costs, reviews recent and ongoing developments, and examines
policy options for Congress.
Citation/Abstract
Full text – PDF (429 KB)
Permalink
.
.
United States Federal Depository Libraries have large sets of these documents
in print if they have not discarded them in favor of online access, including
academic and public libraries, occupying many ranges of shelves for libraries
with complete sets.
Full text hearings can be found selectively via Google Searches as well.
This link provides more information regarding these documents.
Penn State University Libraries
U.S. Government : Legislative Branch
a guide to resources for researching legislative branch (Congressional) publications.
U.S. Congress
Bills
Hearings
Resolutions
Documents
Committee Prints
Reports
The Congressional Record
Statutes
Congressional Research Service
Congressional Member Research
Federal Depository Library Program
Penn State Libraries participate in the Federal Depository Library Program
Hearings
http://psu.libguides.com/legislative/hearings
“Congressional (from Proquest) — formerly LexisNexis Congressional (New Interface)
Find transcripts of hearings as well as full text of Bills and Committee Reports.
Hint: Use the Advanced Search feature to limit your search to Hearings.
Legislative Insight
Find the hearings for any bill that became public law.
FDSys : Federal Digital System : Congressional Hearings
The digital repository for the Government Publishing Office (GPO), hearings
released to the GPO by Congressional committees are made available
in both print and digital format.”
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/browse/collection.action?collectionCode=CHRG
.
.
Google Books has some committee hearing transcripts in full text as well.
.
Hathi Trust Digital Library
Congressional Hearings
.
U.S. House Committees
https://www.google.com/#q=U+S+House+Committees
.
U.S. Senate Committees
https://www.google.com/#q=U+S+Senate+Committees
.
U.S. Senate Hearings
https://www.google.com/#q=U+S+Senate+Hearings
.
U.S. House Hearings
https://www.google.com/#q=U+S+House+Hearings
.
.
Congressional Hearings FROM Google Scholar
.
.
Congressional Hearings FROM Google Books
.
.
Congressional Hearings FROM Google Videos
.
.
Congressional Hearings FROM Google Blog Search
.
.
Congressional Hearings FROM Google Domain Limited Web Search (GOV)
.
.
Congressional Hearings FROM Google Domain Limited Web Search (VIDEOS)
.
.
Congressional Hearings FROM Google Domain Limited Web Search (NEWS)
.
.
Congressional Hearings FROM Google Domain Limited Web Search (JSTOR)
.
.
Congressional Hearings FROM Google Domain Limited Web Search (SCIENCEDIRECT)
.
.
Congressional Hearings FROM Google Domain Limited Web Search (PUBMED)
.
.
PUBMED
.
.
Congressional Hearings FROM Google Domain Limited Web Search (NCJRS)
.
.
Temple Summon Search
909,286 results
SOURCE TYPE Sort Order
Archival Material (406)
Art (2)
Audio Recording (2,237)
Book / eBook (83,249)
Book Chapter (1,181)
Book Review (2,936)
Case (1)
Conference Proceeding (230)
Data Set (75)
Database (2)
Dissertation (4,322)
Electronic Resource (11)
Government Document (347,586)
Image (16)
Journal / eJournal (27)
Journal Article (42,067)
Magazine (4)
Magazine Article (20,491)
Manuscript (48)
Market Research (30)
Microform (21)
Newsletter (5,487)
Newspaper (164)
Newspaper Article (202,794)
Pamphlet (1)
Paper (276)
Patent (12)
Photograph (18)
Poem (5)
Presentation (1)
Publication (336)
Publication Article (37)
Realia (1)
Reference (3,240)
Report (5,720)
Research Guide (227)
Special Collection (19)
Standard (3)
Streaming Audio (1)
Streaming Video (105)
Technical Report (82)
Trade Publication Article (2,555)
Transcript (187,332)
Video Recording (211)
Web Resource (2,234)
.
.
WEBBIB1516
.
.
Sincerely,
David Dillard
Temple University
http://workface.com/e/daviddillard
Net-Gold
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/net-gold
http://listserv.temple.edu/archives/net-gold.html
https://groups.io/org/groupsio/Net-Gold/archives
http://net-gold.3172864.n2.nabble.com/
General Internet & Print Resources
COUNTRIES
EMPLOYMENT
TOURISM
DISABILITIES
INDOOR GARDENING
https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/IndoorGardeningUrban/info
Educator-Gold
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Educator-Gold/
K12ADMINLIFE
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/K12AdminLIFE/
The Russell Conwell Learning Center Research Guide:
THE COLLEGE LEARNING CENTER
Information Literacy
Research Guides
https://sites.google.com/site/researchguidesonsites/
Nina Dillard’s Photographs on Net-Gold
and also at
http://www.flickr.com/photos/neemers/
Twitter: davidpdillard
Temple University Site Map
https://sites.google.com/site/templeunivsitemap/home
Bushell, R. & Sheldon, P. (eds),
Wellness and Tourism: Mind, Body, Spirit,
Place, New York: Cognizant Communication Books.
Wellness Tourism: Bibliographic and Webliographic Essay
David P. Dillard
RailTram Discussion Group
From the Union Pacific to BritRail and Beyond
https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/railtram/info
INDOOR GARDENING
Improve Your Chances for Indoor Gardening Success
https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/IndoorGardeningUrban/info
SPORT-MED
https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/sport-med.html
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/sports-med/
http://listserv.temple.edu/archives/sport-med.html
HEALTH DIET FITNESS RECREATION SPORTS TOURISM
https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/healthrecsport/info
http://listserv.temple.edu/archives/health-recreation-sports-tourism.html
.
.
Please Ignore All Links to JIGLU
in search results for Net-Gold and related lists.
The Net-Gold relationship with JIGLU has
been terminated by JIGLU and these are dead links.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Net-Gold/message/30664
http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/healthrecsport/message/145
Temple University Listserv Alert :
Years 2009 and 2010 Eliminated from Archives
https://sites.google.com/site/templeuniversitylistservalert/
.
.