Friday, December 5, 2014

Open Access Journal: Sudan notes and records

[First posted in AWOL 20 October 2009. Updated 5 December 2014]

Sudan notes and records [From the University of Michigan Digital General Collection]
Sudan notes and records [From the University of Khartoum E - Journals]
ISSN: 0375-2984
 http://journals.uofk.edu/images/stories/Nihal/HOME%20j4.png
Holdings details below are from Khartoum:
Vol. 01 1918
Vol. 02 1919
Vol. 03 1920
Vol. 04 1921
Vol. 05 1922
Vol. 06 1923
Vol. 07 1924
Vol. 08 1925
Vol. 09 1926
Vol. 10 1927
Vol. 11 1928
Vol. 12 1929
Vol. 13 1930
Vol. 14 1931
Vol. 15 1932
Vol. 16 1933
Vol. 17 1934
Vol. 18 1935
Vol. 19 1936
Vol. 20 1937
Vol. 21 1938
Vol.27 1946
Vol.28 1947
Vol.47 1966
Vol.48 1967
Vol.49 1968

4 comments:

  1. great job, posting this valuable journal on the web. Thanks!
    Suggestions: 1. if the table on this page http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=genpub;idno=ACT4675 could also include volume number and year.
    and 2. perhaps if table of contents of all the volumes could be displayed as a separate page so it would be easier to search.
    Thanks!!

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  2. That certainly would be nice, but that isn't the way U Michigan's Digital General Collections seems to do it... alas...

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  3. There is slight mistake, which is Vol.5 repeated as Vol.6. Furthermore,what a bout the Volumes which are not posted,is it because the powers that be, wants to hide some facts, or the publishing house was paid by those who exercised organized slave trade in Sudan and therefore fear to be known, the public needs to know

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  4. Dear Anonymous,

    Volume 6 is fixed. I have no insight on why the missing years are missing from this digital collection except to note that those are the years of WWII - a time when communication broke down. I assume the simply don't have copies.

    In any case there are paper copies in many libraries in Europe and North America, and probably elsewhere, so you are free to check them for yourself.

    For my account, I appreciate the generosity of the University of Khartoum E-Journals initiative (http://journals.uofk.edu/). The make them available without charge when they could just as easily have reprinted them at a very high price, or locked them in an expensive aggregation.

    ReplyDelete