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Social and Environmental Justice: Introduction

This page provides links to resources to help new users find materials in Laurier Library, including video tutorials, links to other relevant subject guides, and a list of subject-specific databases. Any available related course guides will appear at the bottom of the page.

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Beginning Your Research

Start researching as soon as you get your assignment. Some resources that you may want to use might not be easy to access; some materials may be kept in off-site storage or need to come from another organization entirely. Give yourself as much time as possible to find these materials by starting right away.

Get a basic understanding of your topic. Use the Start Here list of databases to gather basic information about your topic to help you plan your research strategy. You can also search the library's encyclopedias and reference books, newspaper collections, or use the internet to help get a feel for your topic. It's okay to use online non-scholarly resources to help you get familiar with your topic, but you cannot cite them as scholarly sources in your work. Use this information to learn who the experts in the field are, to spot trends and gaps in works about your topic, and to generate a list of keywords and subject headings to help you in your main search.

When you search online, remember to test any website you visit for currency, relevance, authority, accuracy and purpose.

Watch these short videos for help with the research process: Developing a Research Question, Creating a Search Strategy

Developing Information Literacy Skills: A Guide to Finding, Evaluating, and Citing Sources by Janine Carlock

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Scholarly Resources

Depending on your topic, you may need to search broadly using Omni, Laurier Library's academic research tool, and our interdisciplinary databases. Omni captures a lot of information, but it's not infallible; you should always visit appropriate databases and search them directly as well. Look below for a list of relevant databases, or visit the full list of available databases.

Follow this link to learn about evaluating resources.

Click here for quick videos about evaluating resources.

Click here for a guide to reading strategies for scholarly materials.

See All Tutorials

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Getting Started with Omni, Laurier Library's Academic Research Tool

5 Minute Video, Omni Help Page

If you want personalized help, contact your Subject Librarian.

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Other helpful subject guides:

Data & Statistics, Law & Society, History, Sociology

Global Studies, International Public Policy, Political Science

Water Science and Environmental Health, Religion

See All Subject Guides

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Databases: Start Here

Nexis Uni

Full-text documents for international news, business, legal research, and key people in the news.

CPI.Q

Index for Canadian academic journals and popular magazines

Factiva

A full-text resource with news, business information and journal articles drawn from almost 9000 worldwide sources, including Globe and Mail, Toronto Star and the KW Record.

PAIS Index

International index to various types of publications on public/social policy and social sciences. Includes PAIS Archive.

Europa World

Contains political and economic information and selected data on countries and organizations worldwide.

Databases: Main

GreenFILE

Multidisciplinary database with scholarly, government, and general-interest titles covering all aspects of human impact on the environment

UNdata

Large, comprehensive statistical database covering all countries of the world. Pulls together statistics from all the major UN sources.

Databases: Also Useful

TOXNET

Multidatabase search tool for information on toxicology, hazardous chemicals, environmental health, and toxic releases.

Docuseek

Over one thousand video documentaries on social and environmental issues.

Page Owner: CJ Nyssen

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