strategy & nonviolent struggle
soan 071B / pols 081 / peac 071B
Tripod (paper books, online books, journal articles)
Newspaper databases (library subscribes)
Journal article databases (scholarly sources)
Google (news articles, Facebook, blog posts, press releases)
also: talking to activists, using an organization's archives, searching Google Books, the Worldcat database, or Amazon to identify relevant books not owned by the TriCo Libraries...
a general approach to finding relevant sources:
What words might a participant use? A sympathetic journalist? A scholar?
What about a less sympathetic journalist? A company spokesperson? An opponent?
Are there culturally-specific or movement-specific terms that would be used by the activists you're researching?
- Make sure you're using the correct geographic terms
Case 1945-46 in which Pare women in Tanzania protested against the British colonial tax system...Tanzania was formed in 1964-65 from Tanganyika and Zanzibar.
- Try searching for varying spellings of names
Khadija al-Riadi
Khadija Ryadi
Khadija Riyadi
This technique will work on:
- Tripod
- Scholarly journal databases (almost any except JSTOR)
- Newspaper databases (such as Access World News)You'll likely use Google frequently to research cases, and there are many strategies for doing this effectively.
- Try a different database or search tool.
- Broaden the scope of your search.
- Don't neglect print sources and tools.
- Ask a librarian to work with you.
M 3-5 PM W 1-3 PM
Sarah Elichko
selichk1@swarthmore.edu