Start from what you know (from the case description).
• Who?
Activist group name? (local? chapter of larger org?)
Farmer's name? Name of gas company?
• Where?
Name of nearest larger town/city?
• What?
What words do activists use to describe the action?
What about the target? Opposition more broadly?
• When?
What relevant date(s) do you know?
What else was happening at this time?
• Who?
Social media and web sources from activist group
Blog posts, press releases from larger organization
News and other media quoting or referencing the
farmer, gas company, and/or activists
• Where?
Names of local and regional newspapers + media
Info about other similar actions in the local area
• Keywords and links
Use to search different sites, including web archives
• When?
More manageable search results (narrow by date)
• Found a Facebook post on the demonstration by a
member of the activist group.
---> searched Access World News for this person's
name, found out that she's quoted in
newspaper articles you hadn't found before
• Read a local newspaper article quoting a gas company
representative.
---> searched for the gas company name,
learned that they testified in front of the
state Department of Environmental Protection,
obliquely referencing the demonstration
Phrase searching
Search tools bar (on results page)
Filetype:pdf
Advanced Search panel - see more options
Basic set-up
your keyword site:swarthmore.edu
How to search multiple platforms at once:
railroad strike site:instagram.com | site:tiktok.com | site:pinterest.com
Put the URL immediately after site: (don’t leave spaces)
Leave spaces around the pipe | separating multiple sites.
Edit site URLs to find specific kinds of content:
Find Instagram posts (instead of profiles):
keyword site:instagram.com/p
Find TikToks (instead of Discover pages w/ multiple videos):
keyword site:https://tiktok.com/@
Limit results by date range
Posted after 2021: "fly a drone" site:tiktok.com after:2021
Posted between 11/1/21–3/1/22:
drone site:tiktok.com after:2021-10-31 before:2022-03-02
You can get significantly different search results by searching the same keywords in different search engines, for example:
Find the website for a newspaper, TV station, or other media outlet based near your case.
Copy the URL. (e.g. nytimes.com)
Look up the site on the Wayback Machine on archive.org.
Using archived versions of websites can let you:
You’ve likely used Google Maps Street View to see photos of specific locations.
You can sometimes use Street View to see older photos too. For example, compare Philadelphia’s Dilworth Park in March 2012 with Dilworth Park in 2023.
Consider looking up photos of the locations where your cases took place, in case understanding what it looked like (from one vantage point) helps.
Other map services a with street view feature include Bing Maps, KartaView, Baidu Maps, and Yandex Maps. Each service has different geographic coverage. Find more from Wikipedia's List of street view services by country.
Search logs (see Tools + Worksheets)
Take good notes
• Names (individuals, organizations, agencies)
• Terms used by or to describe people involved
• Any alternative spellings, transliterations, translations
• Locations of importance
• Historical, colonial, or postcolonial names
• Key dates (consider making a simple timeline)
• Legislation, policies - any specific focal point / impetus
• Vocabulary that is characteristic of each side
Look through the PEAC 71B Research Guide
Reach out to Simon for suggestions and advice.
- Email: selichk1@swarthmore.edu
- Make an appointment: bit.ly/selichk1