Coverage: 1960-1963. U.S. diplomatic documents focusing on internal economic, industrial, and social affairs of Argentina, sourced from the U.S. National Archives.
Coverage: 1910-1921. Materials assemble by members of the Committee on Historical Research of the Mexican Revolution, sourced from Archivo General de la Nacion, Mexico City, but reproducing documents from various archives. The collection is divided into 5 series: 1) The Flores Brothers revolutionary activities MAGO: movement Comun in the Baja California region; (2) Revolution and regime Madero: correspondence, reports and military activities, reports on the political situation in some States; (3) Emiliano Zapata, the Plan of Ayala and his agrarian policy: land deals, reports of troops and mail operations; (4) Revolution and regime Constitutionalist: circulars, laws, decrees and manifestos; and, (5) Sovereign revolutionary Convention: together prior to the sessions and sessions held 1914-1915.
Coverage: 1910-1925. Documents by and addressed to Emiliano Zapata, including correspondence, combat reports, promotion and appointment requests; allegations of abuses committed by military personnel; applications for food, uniforms and ammunition, transcripts, journals, laws and draft laws on land, drafts of circulars and manifestos, sourced from Archivo General de la Nacion, Mexico City.
Coverage: 1901-1919. Documents related to the activities of Emiliano Zapata and the Liberation Army of the South, consisting primarily of correspondence between the headquarters and the camps and regional commands, as well as acts or proceedings on revolutionary and civil trials and correspondence with municipal or State authorities. Sourced from Archivo General de la Nacion, Mexico City.
Coverage: 1898-1958. This collection comprises, in its entirety, the Scholarly Resources microfilm collection entitled The Women's Movement in Cuba, 1898-1958: The Stoner Collection on Cuban Feminism. The collection is comprised of 3 series: works by feminists about feminists and their causes, works by men on the status of women, and literary works by feminist writers that illustrate or discuss the condition of women.
Founded in 1931 by Argentine intellectual Victoria Ocampo (1890-1979) and featured the writings of the leading figures in literature, philosophy, history and the plastic arts from Latin America, North America and Western Europe. The edition includes images of the complete magazine and a set of images of manuscripts from the first issue as well as an unpublished set of letters by Victoria Ocampo.
Access: Off Campus Access is available for: UNC-Chapel Hill students, faculty, and staff; UNC Hospitals employees; UNC-Chapel Hill affiliated AHEC users. Language: Spanish