When looking for social work research that is open access and therefore free to use and read, there are several tools and strategies that can help.
Search for what research exists on government websites at the county level, state level, or national level. Government-funded research is often required to be shared openly
There are tools that can help you find open-access versions of articles when you're searching the internet and using things like Google Scholar.
Some Journals are fully open access and are excellent sources for evidence and to stay abreast of what is happening in the field. Tools are available to help you identify what social work journals are freely available.
A free resource from the US National Library of Medicine and a key resource for medicine, nursing, dentistry, veterinary medicine, the health care system, and the preclinical sciences.
This is the open interface developed and maintained by the Department of Education. Full text is linked when available openly. ERIC contains a large amount of gray literature (e.g. white papers, government reports, conference materials, etc...)
Open archive of the social sciences, provides a free, non-profit, open access platform for social scientists to upload working papers, preprints, and published papers, with the option to link data and code.
CRS is Congress’ think tank, and its reports are relied upon by academics, businesses, judges, policy advocates, students, librarians, journalists, and policymakers for accurate and timely analysis of important policy issues.
Designed to help social service professionals throughout the world conveniently maintain an awareness of news regarding the profession and emerging scholarship.
Set up as a “bookmarklet” (or link in your bookmarks bar), this searches for a free, legal version of the page you’re on and automates a request to the author(s) if it can’t find one. You can also search for articles on OAButton’s webpage using the DOI, URL, and title.
Provides access to high quality, open access, peer-reviewed journals. Search for a journals or individual articles among their nearly 6 million results.