Always was, always will be Aboriginal land.

 

The University of Sydney Library acknowledges that our buildings, collections, and practices exist on unceded Aboriginal lands. We recognise the diversity and knowledges of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander staff and students across all the lands the University stands on, and respect the ongoing connection Aboriginal people have to these lands, their cultural practices, knowledge systems and histories. We pay our respects to their Elders, past and present, who have handed down custodianship to each generation for more than 60,000 years. 

 

Money, J. (2021). Yilabara (Now). Filmed on Gadigal Country. Commissioned by the University of Sydney Library

First Nations Hub

Harvard Business Review

Unit of Study readings from Harvard Business Review
HBR archive (vol. 1, 1922- )
Browse HBR back issues
Browse by article date
Browse individual issues
HBR case studies
Ordering case studies (Business academics)
Other access options
Printing, saving and linking restrictions

Unit of Study readings from Harvard Business Review

To access a specific article:

1. Access Harvard Business Review via EBSCO

Note: if you receive an "Error in HttpHandler" message after clicking on the EBSCOhost link, please close the page with the HttpHandler message and try the link again.

2. Select Advanced search on the right hand side of the page

3. Enter the title of the article into the second search box at the top of the page. In the following example we are looking for:

Whitler, K. A. (2019). What Western marketers can learn from ChinaHarvard Business Review, 97(3), 74-82.

An image of a database interface. The text in the first search box is SO "Harvard Business Review" and the text in the second search box is the journal article title "What Western marketers can learn from China" An image of a database interface. The text in the first search box is SO "Harvard Business Review" and the text in the second search box is the journal article title "What Western marketers can learn from China"

An image of a database interface. The text in the first search box is SO "Harvard Business Review" and the text in the second search box is the journal article title "What Western marketers can learn from China"

4. Click on the Search button

5. From your search results page, click on Access options and select PDF to access the article.

An image showing that the PDF full text option is located in the access options drop-down below the journal article information An image showing that the PDF full text option is located in the access options drop-down below the journal article information

An image showing that the PDF full text option is located in the access options drop-down below the journal article information

HBR archive (vol. 1, 1922- )

1. Access Business Source Ultimate

2. Enter your search terms into the boxes at the top of the page

3. Select Publications and enter Harvard Business Review into the search box  

4. Select Harvard Business Review from results

5. Click Add to search

An image of a database interface showing how to enter search terms into the search boxes that follows the text instructions above. An image of a database interface showing how to enter search terms into the search boxes that follows the text instructions above.

An image of a database interface showing how to enter search terms into the search boxes that follows the text instructions above.

6. Click Search to run the search. 

Browse HBR back issues

Browse by article date

To view a list of HBR articles sorted by most recent to oldest, access Harvard Business Review via EBSCO and click Search without adding any further search terms. This will include digital articles – you can use the Publication filter to limit the results further.

Browse individual issues

1. Open Business Source Ultimate

2. Click on the Publications tab under the search boxes

3. Type Harvard Business Review into the search box

4. Click on the Harvard Business Review title.

An image showing that the publications tab is the third from the left and "Harvard Business Review" is typed into the search box. An image showing that the publications tab is the third from the left and "Harvard Business Review" is typed into the search box.

An image showing that the publications tab is the third from the left and "Harvard Business Review" is typed into the search box.

HBR case studies

Ordering case studies (Business academics)

Harvard Publishing doesn’t allow academic libraries to purchase Harvard teaching cases. Academic staff can order Harvard case studies through the Business School.

Other access options

  • Harvard Business Review

    Add case study to the second search box to access case studies published within the Harvard Business Review via EBSCO.

       

Printing, saving and linking restrictions

Some Harvard Business Review articles have restrictions that prevent you from printing, saving and/or linking to the article. To check if an article has any of these restrictions, you can see them listed at the end of each article. You may also see messages such as "The full text for selected articles from this publisher cannot be printed" or "The publisher offers limited access to this article. The full text cannot be printed or saved" when you first open the article.