GJRC Library Workshop
Course Number: GJRC690
Subject: Global Studies, Religion and Culture
Accessing resources
Omni (books and articles)
Omni is the search tool for the Laurier Library’s print and other collections and a subset of our electronic resources. It also contains the print and circulating collections of 18 other Ontario university libraries, which can be requested by Laurier community members for delivery.
In general, after you search Omni, you can use the facets on the left to filter your results. Some common filters include:
- Books and eBooks
- Articles
- Peer-reviewed journals
- Publication date
Follow citation trail in Omni
- Up arrows find sources citing this item
- Down arrows find sources cited in this item
eBooks
Most the Library's eBooks are catalogued in Omni. However an Omni search will only retrieve eBooks if your search words are in the catalogue record (author, title, subject, abstract, etc.), and NOT the full text. It can sometimes be helpful to search the full text of an eBook collection, particular for more obscure topics. The Library subscribes to eBooks through a large number of eBook collections, so you cannot search all our eBooks at once. However the following two sources are good places to start:
Books not in Omni
While a large percentage of the book titles you might want are likely owned by an Omni library, you may also want to search beyond Omni to see what items you can request through Interlibrary loan.
- Resources for Graduate Students
- Developing a research question (6:33 video tutorial)
- Planning a literature review (5:09 video tutorial)
- RE690 - RCGJ MA Library Workshop (workshop PowerPoint)
Source types
Journal articles
Hankivsky, O., Grace, D., Hunting, G., Giesbrecht, M., Fridkin, A., Rudrum, S., Ferlatte, O., & Clark, N. (2014). An intersectionality-based policy analysis framework: critical reflections on a methodology for advancing equity. International Journal for Equity in Health, 13(1), 119-135. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12939-014-0119-x
Books
Zack, N. (2024). Intersectionality: A Philosophical Framework. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197693070.001.0001
Book chapters
Bishop, S. (2024). The Voices of Hope: A Traveling Miracle. In The Oxford Handbook of Community Singing. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197612460.013.31
Conference proceedings
Ma, L. lEller, Dickson-Deane, C., Raffe, W., Murphy, A. R., & Garcia, J. (2024). Gaming for Equity: The Power of Diversity within Gender and Race in Gamers. 2024 IEEE Conference on Games (CoG), 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1109/CoG60054.2024.10645628
Reference sources
Mansager, E. (2022). Spirituality. In: Glăveanu, V.P. (eds) The Palgrave Encyclopedia of the Possible. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham.
Magazine articles
Addario, Lynsey, and Leila Fadel. Being Muslim in America. National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 233. Washington: National Geographic Partners, 2018.
Primary sources
Abdel Haleem, M. A., trans. The Qurʼan. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015.
Videos
Harmoni: Healing Together. London, England: Royal Anthropological Institute, 2021.
Newspaper articles
Hogben, Alia. "The Mixing of Religion and Politics can Become Problematic." Kingston Whig - Standard, A7. Sep 23, 2023.
Letters to the editor
Letter to the editor. "Religion Shouldn't be Forced on Students." Nanaimo News Bulletin, Dec 12, 2019.
Editorials
Milloy, John. "Religion can Help Bring Us Together." Waterloo Region Record, A9. May 03, 2023.
Dissertations or theses
Fong, A. L. (2023). Female gamers’ perceptions of their mental health influenced by the online gaming space (Publication No. 30810740) [Doctoral Dissertation], University of Lethbridge. ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global.
Grey literature
Black, V. (2024). AI Job Displacement: Perspectives on the Future of Work From Beneath the Silicon Ceiling. Somatmosphere. https://somatosphere.net/ai-job-displacement-perspectives-on-the-future-of-work-from-beneath-the-silicon-ceiling
Immigration Partnership of Waterloo Region (2021). Waterloo Region Immigrant Survey Summary Report. https://www.immigrationwaterlooregion.ca/en/business-opportunities/resources/Resources--Publications/2021-Immigrant-Survey-Summary-Report.pdf
What is a library database?
A library database is an online searchable collection of information, often in the form of references to articles, books, and book chapters (but also newspaper articles, thesis, music, etc). Consider how the author of this thesis utilizes databases and search techniques, as described on pages 23ff.
Dissertation
Davis, D. E. (2019). Strong black women, depression, and the pentecostal church (Order No. 13807317). ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global.
Database searching tips
- Consider word variations and synonyms
- think about how others might refer to your ideas
- e.g, child death, perinatal death, neonatal death, stillbirth, sudden infant death, etc.
Search Tactics
What is the tactic? | What does the tactic do? | Examples |
---|---|---|
Boolean AND | Use AND to ensure that all terms appear in every search result. | depression AND homecare |
Boolean OR | Use OR to ensure that at least one term appears in every search result. | health OR medical Tutorial: Better searching using AND, OR, NOT |
Phrase searching | Use “quotation marks” to find more than one term in a row. | “health care” |
Truncation | Use an asterisk* at the end of a term to include multiple endings. (sometimes $) | trauma* trauma, traumatic, traumatically, traumatize, traumatized, traumatizing |
- Employ search limiters (available limiters depend on the database)
- peer reviewed, article type, date
- e.g, in APA PsycInfo, can include: age group, population group, methodology
- Identify key publications and authors
- note citations, and cited references, repeated author names
- Document and track everything you do in the steps above
Subject databases
Omni is a large index, but it does not contain everything, so it is important to duplicate your searches across other subject databases. There is no such thing as a typical GJRC topic, with much of your research likely to be of an interdisciplinary nature. Here are some examples of databases you could search. Note: if you already know the title of an article, you can search for it in Omni (tutorial: Finding an article when you only know the title)
News articles
The Library subscribes to a wide variety of Canadian, US, and international news sources, both current and archival. More information.
Dissertations and theses
Dissertations and theses may be considered scholarly sources since they are closely supervised by a dissertation committee made up of scholars, are directed at an academic audience, are extensively researched, follow research methodology, and are cited in other scholarly work. However, dissertations are still considered student work and are not peer-reviewed. They often contain extensive bibliographies.
Grey literature
Grey literature is information produced outside traditional scholarly publications. It includes reports, policy briefs and reports, major research papers, white papers, working papers, government documents, speeches, etc.
There is no single database that covers grey literature well, so Google is helpful in cases like this. Consider the following tips when searching Google, often using these in combination:
- limit to domain
- site:ca, site:edu
- limit to document type
- filetype:pdf, filetype:pptx
- think how a document might phrase something, enclose that in quotes
Below are some links to some possible sources of grey literature.
Available through Laurier Library
Available online
- The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives
- Institute concerned with issues of social, economic and environmental justice.
- Canadian Council on Social Development
- Connecting not-for-profit, philanthropic, government and business organizations.
- Canadian Think Tanks (McGill University)
- A-Z list of Canadian Think Tanks.
- The Council of Canadians
- A social action organization.
- Institute for Social Research (York University)
- Houses the largest university-based survey research centre in Canada.
Citation Management
Zotero is a free citation management tool helps you organize all all references in one place. More information.