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Criminal Justice Sources

Criminal Justice sources

Suggested Sources for Factual Research

NOTE: You probably won't use these for your annotated bibliography! You may need them, though, for other sections of your final paper. 

Government Facts

  • Oregon Blue Book
    The "Official State Fact Book about all levels of government in Oregon." Describes the duties of all state agencies, offices, etc.; provides links to Legislation; etc. Current info is online. For old facts (like, what committees existed in 1972, etc.) we have old printed Blue Books in the library. Similar sources exist for other U.S. states.
  • FDsys
    Comprehensive database of US federal publications from the last 15 years, including legislation, directories, court opinions, etc. This is the online version of what was once the Government Printing Office.
  • United States Government Manual
    Official handbook describes the function, structure, etc. of the parts of the federal government, such as the Department of Education, the U.S. Court of Appeals, etc.
  • U.S. Election Statistics Resources
    Compilation of links to many different sources of stats on elections.
  • World Factbook
    Authoritative statistics about countries around the world, compiled by the CIA. "Provides information on the history, people, government, economy, energy, geography, communications, transportation, military, and transnational issues for 267 world entities."

     

News Reports

  • Lexis-Nexis Academic 
    The most complete database for newspaper, magazine and other popular press articles from 1990 to the present. Sources from all over the world are included. (Warning, the interface is not very user-friendly. But if you want to find a lot of news articles on a particular event or topic, this is the best place to go!)
  • Google News Search 
    Good, but it only goes back a few years. On the plus side, it's easier to use than Lexis Nexis. 

 

Demographics and other Statistics