POLI 327 Library WorkshopMichelle Lake
Political Science, Government Publications, SCPA & FPST Librarian
Vanier Library – Loyola Campus
24/7 access, with student card, after 11pm
1st, 2nd, and 3rd floor VL – “Vanier Library”
Computers/Printers/Photocopiers/Scanners
Group Study Rooms & Course Reserves: Textbooks
Print Journal Archive
Webster Library – SGW Campus
24/7 access, with student card, after 11pm
2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th floor of LB - “Library Building”
Computers/Printers/Photocopiers/Scanners
Group Study Rooms & Course Reserves: Textbooks
Current Print Journals
Grey Nuns Reading Room – SGW Campus
1190 Guy St.
Access 9am-9pm, with student card
Group Study Rooms & Quiet Study
Outlets/Wifi
Bring your own device
Discovery Search, searches through the library
catalogue and somejournal article databases
It’s a great place to start if you’re looking for a specific book or
article
Here is where you login to the library,
when you’re off campus
This is the section for undergrads, click
‘More…’ to see all services available
How do I find a book or an article, when I already know
the title?
O’Donnell, Guillermo, Philippe C. Schmitter, and, Laurence Whitehead, eds. 1986. Transitions from Authoritarian Rule: Southern Europe. Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
This is a book review, published in an
academic journal.
This is a book review, published in an
academic journal.
This is a book review, published in an
academic journal.
This is the book!
Munck, Gerardo L. and Carol Skalnik Leff. 1997. “Modes of Transition and Democratization: South America and Eastern Europe in Comparative Perspective,” Comparative Politics 29, no. 3 (April): 343 –362.
The full-text of the article is available
from the JSTOR database
This citation does not match the title we
searched; the article we are looking for is cited by this article and appears in its
reference list
Bermeo, Nancy. 1987. “Redemocratizationand Transition Elections: A Comparison of Spain and Portugal,” Comparative Politics 19, no. 2 (Jan): 213-231.
Article not found in the results.
Bermeo, Nancy. 1987. “Redemocratization and Transition Elections: A Comparison of Spain and Portugal,” Comparative Politics 19, no. 2 (Jan): 213-231.
Bermeo, Nancy. 1987. “Redemocratizationand Transition Elections: A Comparison of Spain and Portugal,” Comparative Politics 19, no. 2 (Jan): 213-231.
Bermeo, Nancy. 1987. “Redemocratizationand Transition Elections: A Comparison of Spain and Portugal,” Comparative Politics 19, no. 2 (Jan): 213-231.
Bermeo, Nancy. 1987. “Redemocratizationand Transition Elections: A Comparison of Spain and Portugal,” Comparative Politics 19, no. 2 (Jan): 213-231.
Linz, Juan J. and Alfred Stephan. 1996. “Actors and Contexts.” In Problems of Democratic Transition and Consolidation: Southern Europe, South America, and Post-Communist Europe, Juan J. Linz and Alfred Stephan, 66-84. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
What if we don’t have the book or article at Concordia ?
Interlibrary loans/COLOMBO
Request print books and e-journal articles from other libraries.
Print books are delivered to Concordia for you to borrow.
E-journal articles are emailed directly to you.
What if we don’t have the book at Concordia ?
BCI Card
Go the Loans/Circulation desk at Webster library with your student ID card and request a BCI card.
You can go to other university libraries in the city, like McGill and University of Montreal, and borrow books from their collections, in person.
Two types of sources
Non-Academic/Primary Sources: such as news articles, government documents, NGO reports, government agency or international organization websites and publications or data sources (e.g., Freedom House/World Bank)
Academic (Peer reviewed) Publications: refer to peer-reviewed, scholarly articles and books published by university presses. For articles to be peer reviewed, the journal must use the double-blind peer-review process.
Non-Academic Sources
Country Profiles, Government, NGO & IGO reports
Non-peer reviewed
Good background sources
Created by governments or international institutions that monitor governments
http://bit.ly/POLI327
Statesman’s Yearbook (current year in print, in the
Webster reference collection):
Gives a recent overview of social institutions, religion,
trade, resources and industries and government
Government Information SearchSearches Intergovernmental Organization websites
Use the drop-down menu to select the region
Use keywords and a country name to search for reports
http://library.concordia.ca/find/government/index.php
Google Advanced
Search
google.ca/advanced_search
China – Domain: .gov.cn
Cuba – Domain: .gob.cu
Israel – Domain: .gov.il
Philippines – Domain: .gov.ph
Russia – Domain: .gov.ru
Singapore – Domain: .gov.sg
Wayback Machine: looking at websites over time
February 2018 October 2014
Newspapers
Searching
Topics and Keywords
AND – limits how many results your search produces
Example: Cuba AND sanctions
OR – increases the number of results your search produces
Example: china AND (capitalism OR “free trade”)
Topics and Keywords
“exact phrase” – limits how many results your search produces
Example: “ethnic conflict”
* – increases the number of results your search produces, because it adds all the possible endings
Example: democra* finds: democracy, democracies, democratic, democratically, democratization, etc.
Avoid Searching with unnecessary words
Effects
Impact
Consequences
Influence
Results
Importance
Significance
Each author may use different linking words when discussing similar topics.
You don’t want your search to be limited to those books and articles that only contain the word “effect” or “consequence”
Academic Sources
Searching for books
We’re searching directly in the Library Catalogue and we are using big, broad search terms, because book titles, subjects and tables of contents,
tend to be less specific than journal article titles.
How do I know if a book is academic?
University Press
Book includes citations and a bibliography or reference list
Academic author & editor affiliations and biographies
Searching for journal articles
Find it @ Concordia: access to journal articles
1. Links under the green banner should take you directly to the article.
2. If not, use the library catalogue link to first locate the journal, then the article. You’ll need the year, volume and issue number.
3. If neither option 1 or 2 results in you locating the article, you can request it through COLOMBO.
References, Bibliography &
citations: Academic articles
will have an extensive reference
list or footnotes/endnotes
listing other scholarly sources.
How do I know if an article is academic?
How do I know if an article is
academic and peer reviewed?
Author affiliations
Check the journal title in the Ulrich’s
Database
1. Check the journal titles in the Ulrich’s database
Visit the journal website and
read about their peer review
process
2. Check the Journal’s website for the peer review process
Look for sections ‘About’ the journal or ‘Author instructions’, ‘guide for
authors’, etc.
3. If the journal is Open Access, check the DOAJ
This symbol in Ulrich’s
means Open Access
When you look up the journal title in the DOAJ it will indicate the kind of peer
review process
If a journal is Open Access, you can look it up in the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) to confirm the
type of peer reiew
Need help? Just ask us!Chat with a librarian
online
Or visit the librarians at the Ask Us desk for
help.