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AAS 4160/POLS 4165: African-American Politics: Welcome

Black in Latin America

Multi-episode PBS documentary. Click here for companion PBS website.

Getting Started: Reference Materials

Condense information into a general overview.
May be written by scholars in the field.
Contain suggestions for further reading.

Useful Websites

International Organization/Policy Resources

Research Tips

Brainstorm possible search terms for your topic. You may need to simplify long phrases by breaking them up into separate search terms or smaller phrases.

Consult background information. Specialized encyclopedias, dictionaries and guides are a great time saving tool. Many of these are located in the Reference Collection on Library North 2.

These sources provide topical overviews, summarize basic concepts, and are filled with names and events you can use as keywords in your searching. Many encyclopedia articles also include carefully selected bibliographies that will lead you to additional resources.

Remember that African American studies is interdisciplinary. Check out the research guides for related topics, such as

ANDs, ORs and NOTs. You will need to combine your search terms with connecting terms (called "Boolean operators"), such as AND and OR. Use AND between terms to narrow a search and OR between terms to broaden a search. See the online video → → → → to learn more about how to use Boolean operators.

Be flexible as you settle on a final topic. Do a few preliminary searches in the library catalog or article databases before commiting to a topic. Make sure you can locate primary sources. You may find you need to narrow or broaden your focus.

Cite as you go. Even if you're not sure whether you will use a source, it's much easier to note the citation information up front than to decide you need it later!

History Librarian

Profile Photo
Leslie Madden
she/her
Contact:
Library South
Suite 542
404-413-2807

Boolean Searching

What's Boolean searching? Check out this video!