The definitive collection of government documents and primary sources. All cross-searchable on one powerful platform.
Exclusive offer for OLS
Canadian History & Culture and Government Documents
Webinar
Monday October 6, 2025 @ 11 am EST
Agnes Zientarska-Kayko
Dana Porter Library - University of Waterloo
Government Documents Librarian
Liaison Librarian - Faculty of Environment
Government Information Days - Planning Committee Member
Salvy Trojman
Managing Director - The Trojman Corporation
Join Agnes and Salvy for an information session about the benefits of a stable and reliable source for Government documents. Canada Commons: Canadian History & Culture and Government Documents is the definitive collection of government documents and primary sources. All cross-searchable on one powerful platform.
Can’t make it to the live webinar? Don’t worry! All registrants will receive a recording.
The details
An indexed collection of 1+ million publications, from more than 500 individual departments and agencies, lets users draw from a range of government sources in a single search.
For the first time, find federal, provincial, territorial, and municipal reports, literature from major political parties, information and data pertaining to the issues that matter in Canada—healthcare, climate, education, first peoples, and other topics.
At a glance
Grey Literature
1M+
The collection will reach 1 million pages within 2025.
500+
Coverage of more than 500 sources across all levels of government.
Full-text search
Across all reports, including the Hansard from 1901 to date.
Salvy will also introduce Canadian History and Culture, a new primary source collection on Canada Commons
The details
Newspapers, serials, and other publications—many extremely rare—covering Canadian art, architecture, history, culture, politics, and social movements.
Canadian History and Culture 1919–1970 traces events that led to the modern Canadian identity—the Roaring Twenties, the Great Depression, WWII and the emergence of new roles for women, the Cold War, the LGBTQ and other social movements, protests of the Sixties, and other transitions. More details.
At a glance
Primary Sources
Canadian History and Culture 1919–1970
The first module in the Canadian History and Culture series spans over fifty years. Bibliography
200,000+
Pages of rare historical and literary publications included in 1919-1970.
Canadian History & Culture, 1825-1918
Now available. Bibliography
Support your community with
Genealogy
Explore rare Canadian newspapers and periodicals—many digitized for the first time—to trace family history, uncover ancestors’ stories, and build your family tree.
Community History
Dive into local newspapers, cultural publications, and grassroots periodicals to rediscover your town’s history, civic milestones, and the voices that shaped your community.
Government & Business Research
Access federal, provincial, and municipal reports on economic policy, trade, infrastructure, and public services—essential for entrepreneurs, researchers, and anyone navigating government information.
Canada Commons is a project to preserve and disseminate Canadian knowledge and culture
Created in partnership with Coherent Digital, Canada Commons comprises one million books, government documents, think tank publications, and primary sources from almost 5,000 Canadian organizations.
In 2024, the partnership acquired 1.5 million microfilmed pages from McLaren Micropublishing in Toronto. The extremely rare materials cover Canadian art, architecture, general history, LGBTQ history, women's history, and more.
The materials are being digitized for the first time and will form the basis of new collections available on the Canada Commons platform in 2024 and 2025.
Canada Commons is used by all kinds of libraries— academic, corporate, government, legal, and public. It brings rare, hard-to-find content from Canada that’s relevant to a wide range of studies including sociology, anthropology, business, and economics.