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Emerald Insight

Emerald is a global publisher linking research and practice to the benefit of society. Founded in 1967, Emerald today manages a range of digital products, a portfolio of nearly 300 journals, more than 2,500 books and over 450 teaching cases.

Improving the Emerald customer offering

Improving the experience for all customers globally is a priority for Emerald. As a result we have provided a new web platform, improved rankings and plan for increases in yearly article growth and these are just the start of a journey we have undertaken to enhance the customer experience with Emerald.

Find out more about some of our most recent achievements by clicking on the icon to reveal each infographic.

 

Advanced Search Tips

When searching the Emerald collection, it is important to remember that the entire full-text of the documents is searchable - indicated by Anywhere from the drop-down menu.

 

SEARCHING

You can perform a search across all Emerald content using either the Search tool at the top of each page or the Advanced Search tool on this page. If you are a registered user of the site, you can save your search criteria in order to re-run the search later. By default, search results are sorted by relevance.

Enter one or more search terms and select the type of content to be searched. For example, to search for articles and chapters with the word “library” in their title, enter the text “library” and select “Content item title”. Select any additional filters, such as the Publication Date of “Last 6 months”, and click “Search”.

 

 

BOOLEAN SEARCH

Use the Boolean Operators AND (also + or &), OR, and NOT (also -) in search terms to specify logical relationships between terms. By default, the AND relationship is used. For example, to search for publications with the keyword “computer” but without the keyword “software”, enter the text “computer NOT software”, select “Keyword”, and click “Search”.
 
 
 
 

PHRASES

To override the default use of the AND relationship between search terms, enclose the terms in quotation marks. This creates a search for the exact phrase you have enclosed in quotation marks. For example, an Abstract search for the terms “library” and “science” returns all publications with both terms in their abstracts. However, an Abstracts search for the phrase “library science” enclosed in quotation marks only returns publications with the exact phrase “library science” in their abstracts.
 
 
 

REFINING YOUR SEARCH WITH SEARCH FILTERS

After you run a search, a Refine Search panel displays to the right of the search results page. You can further refine your search results by selecting one of the listed filters. For example, click on one of the listed Keywords to further limit the search results to publications with that keyword.
 
 
 

AUTHOR SEARCHING

Author search includes exact matching. For example, a search for James Smith returns results for James H. C. Smith and James G. Smith, but not for J. Smith. If an initial search using the full author name does not return the desired results, try revising your search to include only the first initial and full last name. You can search for multiple authors using Boolean Operators between author names, for example, “John Smith OR Sally Baker” or “Smith AND Baker” or “John Smith NOT Baker”.
 
 
 

WILD CARDS

Wild cards allow you to construct a query with approximate search terms. Use a question mark (?) in a search term to represent any one character that falls between two other characters, and use an asterisk (*) to represent zero or more characters in the middle or at the end of a search string. There are two limitations of wildcards: (1) They cannot be used at the beginning of a search text, and (2) they cannot be used in a phrase enclosed in quotation marks. Also note that a question mark(?) at the end of a string is treated as a literal.
 
 
 

SAVED SEARCHES

After you have run a search, you can save your search criteria, enabling you to easily re-run the same search in the future. To save a search or run a saved search, you must be logged in as a Registered Personal User of Emerald Insight. You can also sign up for search alerts, which email you the results of the selected search at the specified time interval.