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Executive Agencies and the Office of President
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Information on Federal Executive Agencies
- United States Government Manual (current)> The official handbook of U.S. Government. agencies (current)
> Archival editions: 1935 - 2022 govinfo.gov
> Comprehensive information on agencies of the legislative, judicial, and executive branches.
> Information on quasi-official agencies, international organizations in which U.S. participates, and boards, commissions, and committees.
> Describes programs, activities, organization, history, Social media presence, FOIA procedures
> Includes Statutory and Regulatory Authorities
> History of Organizational Changes includes agencies that were terminated, transferred or renamed since 1933 - A-Z Index of U.S. Government Departments and Agencies (USA.gov)Find contact information for federal, state, and local government agencies; government-related programs; and elected officials.
- Official US Executive Branch Websites (via Library of Congress)Includes links to official webpages of agencies that are in the executive branch of the government. Not necessarily comprehensive.
- Data.govProvides access to datasets generated by the Executive Branch of the Federal Government. Review the catalog for content or request additional datasets.
- End of Term Presidential Web Archive httCaptures and saves U.S. Government websites at the end of presidential administrations. Beginning in 2008, the EOT has thus far preserved websites from administration changes in 2008, 2012 and 2016.
http://eotarchive.cdlib.org/
- Homeland Security Digital Library This link opens in a new windowFull text access to documents related to national security, emergency preparedness, terrorism, border security and related topics from federal, state, tribal, and local government agencies, professional organizations, think tanks, academic institutions, and international governing bodies. Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the Dudley Knox Library of the Naval Postgraduate School.
Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS)
Originally entitled Papers Relating to Foreign Affairs Accompanying the Annual Message of the President, the name of this series was changed in 1870 to Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States, and in 1947 to Foreign Relations Of The United States Diplomatic Papers.
"The Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS) series, the official documentary record of U.S. foreign policy, was born in the opening months of the Civil War. Originating in a response by the Department of State to a request from Congress, the series has endured through vast changes in the international system and the United States’s role in the world, through equally vast changes in the Department of State and in the nation’s government, and through recurrent crises that at times threatened the very survival of the series.
- Foreign Relations of the United States - FRUS (1861 - 1960)The digital facsimile of FRUS is a project of the University of Wisconsin - Madison Libraries in collaboration with the University of Illinois at Chicago Libraries. This is an incomplete run from 1861 - 1960 with missing volumes being added as they can be acquired and processed. 375 volumes.
- Foreign Relations of the United States - FRUS E-book EditionsSelect FRUS volumes are available for download to read on popular electronic devices such as the Amazon Kindle and Apple iPad. (537 volumes) 1861-1988
- Foreign Relations of the United States - FRUS (1945-1988)Official documentary historical record of major U.S. foreign policy decisions and significant diplomatic activity. Available as a web-based edition or downloadable e-book. Search full text or browse by administration. From the 1800s through the Reagan Administration. Department of State, Office of the Historian.
- Toward “Thorough, Accurate, and Reliable”: A History Of The Foreign Relations Of The United States Series[Washington, District of Columbia] : U.S. Department of State, Office of the Historian, Bureau of Public Affairs, 2015.