Access for developing countries
From reading research to discussing the latest breakthroughs, fostering a greater connection between science, medicine and technology with society can help identify and solve society's challenges.
![solar farm](http://images.ctfassets.net/o78em1y1w4i4/jTlv1NrDGvd9u8Jp7suHP/fafa58e53ab8ef11be8aa7d5c79aeb8f/Next_Gen_Story_Header__1044_x_1044_px___2___1_.jpg?fm=webp&w=1044&q=75)
Research4Life
As a founding partner, Elsevier contributes opens in new tab/window over a quarter of the nearly 85,000 peer reviewed resources in Research4Life opens in new tab/window, encompassing ScienceDirect opens in new tab/window and Scopus opens in new tab/window, including over 3,000 Elsevier journals and 20,000 e-books.
Library of Alexandria
We provide individual researchers working in fields such as tropical medicine and sustainable development in the least-developed and low-income countries with access to both ScienceDirect opens in new tab/window and Scopus opens in new tab/window.
Open content
Elsevier publishes open-access articles which are free for readers to access. We also make articles openly available through our open archives and open manuscripts via the CHORUS opens in new tab/window service.
TEEAL
This digital library provides thousands of full-text PDF articles to agricultural researchers working in developing countries and in places where there is no internet access.