Join the FAO AGRIS Webinar: Master Smarter Searching and Explore the New Thematic Search Cards | March 25
06/03/2026
© FAO / Guram Saqvarelidze
Access to reliable agricultural research is essential for advancing sustainable agrifood systems and informed decision-making. FAO AGRIS, an initiative of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), provides free access to millions of scientific records, but many users are not aware of its full search capabilities. This webinar will help participants discover advanced search strategies and new curated thematic entry points to improve research discovery.
During the session, participants will learn advanced search strategies and discover the new Thematic Search Cards, which provide curated entry points to research on key agricultural topics. Participants will also learn how FAO AGRIS supports Open Science and the FAIR principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable).
Webinar sessions Tuesday, 25 March
-
English session 11:00 CET (Timezone converter)
Register here.
-
Spanish session 16:00 CET (Timezone converter) - Mexico and Central America 09:00 | Colombia 10:00 | Bolivia 11:00 | Chile and Argentina 12:00
Register here:
During the webinar, participants will learn how to:
- Access and navigate the FAO AGRIS multilingual platform
- Perform simple and advanced searches to find relevant research
- Use AGROVOC to improve search precision and multilingual discoverability
- Apply filters and Boolean operators to refine search results
- Discover the new Thematic Search Cards for curated research on priority topics
Who should attend
Researchers, librarians, policymakers, students, FAO AGRIS Network members and anyone interested in agricultural knowledge discovery.
To stay updated on future FAO AGRIS events and training opportunities, join the community here.
More about FAO AGRIS
FAO AGRIS is one of the world's largest databases of agricultural scientific literature, providing free access to millions of multilingual bibliographic records and links to research publications contributed by an international network of data providers.
Learn more: fao.org/agris

