RSS feeds
Use RSS feeds to access new material acquired for the collection. You can access a complete list of new acquisitions or new material by subject or format type.
In addition you can now access erecords for older material already in the collections as we continue to convert our card catalogues to erecords.
You can find out more about the kind of material the Library collects in the Library’s Collection Development Policy. Go to the Collection Development Policy
Using RSS feeds
To subscribe to the feed, select the feed title.
Information about subscribing to RSS feeds.
Library feeds
Catalogue
New titles by subject
- Architecture
- Australian art
- Australian history
- Climate change
- Economics
- Family history
- Health
- Indigenous Australia
- Law
- Management
- Music
- NSW publications
- NSW State Government publications
- Overseas publications
- Sport
New titles by format
New titles by Language
- New Arabic publications
- New Bengali publications
- New Burmese publications
- New Chinese publications
- New Croatian publications
- New Czech publications
- New Danish publications
- New Dutch publications
- New Finnish publications
- New French publications
- New German publications
- New Greek publications
- New Gujurati publications
- New Hindi publications
- New Hungarian publications
- New Indonesian publications
- New Italian publications
- New Japanese publications
- New Korean publications
- New Maltese publications
- New Panjabi publications
- New Persian publications
- New Polish publications
- New Portuguese publications
- New Russian publications
- New Serbian publications
- New Sinhalese publications
- New Slovenian publications
- New Spanish publications
- New Swedish publications
- New Tagalog publications
- New Tamil publications
- New Thai publications
- New Urdu publications
- New Vietnamese publications
New English as a Second Language (ESL) publications
Manuscripts, Oral History and Pictures catalogue
New catalogue records created by the eRecords project
These new electronic records are being created for collection material previously only searchable via the Library's card catalogues. Read about the eRecords project.




