You will need to find articles, books or other scholarly sources that provide a background information as well as scholarly arguments about your theme. This tab provides links to some of the best databases for finding these secondary sources. Ideally you will find 10+ secondary sources about your topic. Try to put them into groups according to their main focus or type of argument.
You will be looking for sources that provide two things:
Keyword ideas:
Criminal Justice Database (Proquest) and Criminal Justice Collection (Gale)
These two specialized Criminal Justice journal databases contain only Criminal Justice-related journal articles and are excellent for digging deeper into the available literature. These databases include both articles to which Pacific has direct, full-text access, and articles for which we only have abstracts. To get access to articles that you can't access as full-text, see: How to Get Access (Summit & ILL)
Pacific Library - Boxer Search
Pacific's library search includes millions of items, including both electronic and print material. All of our books and e-books are here, as well as about 80% of the journal articles that we have paid access to. This is the quickest way to get into sources that you can access immediately, without having to guess whether you'll be able to get the full text. Tips:
This database gathers sources from many other databases into one centralized location. It will find nearly any academic book or article that has been published. The downside is that it is so large, that the items you really want to find may be buried under dozens of irrelevant sources. Also, there may be many articles that you cannot actually open. Tips:
This database is the best source for research related to education. If you are doing research for anything related to elementary, secondary or college education, such as juvenile crime rates and schools, this is going to be a good place to look. It also allows you to limit your research just to the elementary school, high school, etc., levels.
CQ Researcher
This database contains very nice overviews of policies/research on big issues like Gentrification, Assisted Suicide, Homelessness, Attracting Jobs, etc. Note: The overviews themselves are a bit broad and encylopedia-like, but each overview includes an extensive bibliography at the end, which lays out many other key sources very nicely! If you find a good article here, it may point you towards 20 other high-quality sources that you can use to write your paper.
This database is especially good for topics in history, political science, English and the humanities. Its biggest negative is that most of the sources in it were published 3+ years ago. Use the Advanced Search for best results! If you scroll down on Advanced Search page, you can pick specific topics to search within. Example:
Dissertations and Theses (Proquest)
This database is an amazing resource for dissertations (which are the final papers of Ph.D. and Master's students, typically 50-250 pages long). This is a great place to find cutting edge research on recent issues. These sources are generally very difficult to find except through this database! Example:
Many More Options...
Many other specialized databases are available through the library. See the "Databases" link on the Library Home Page, then look under the subject "History."