What do we already know?

Reviewing the existing literature to inform your research

SOCI 16 | Professor Ya Su

Simon Elichko (they/them)

Social Sciences & Data Librarian

What we'll talk about today:

  • Difference between literature reviewing and doing background reading
  • Major journals in sociology
  • Tools and approaches for navigating the research literature
  • Organizing your research to facilitate your learning

Intellectual interests

↓↓↓

Topics

↓↓

Research question

Sources

Argument

what you know already

multiple smaller questions

what you need to learn more about

Sense-making strategy:

Map your research ideas

Key question for planning your literature review:

What do you need to know more about?

Background reading

  • Background information and context (who, what, when, where, how much)
  • Can inform your methodological choices
  • Can help introduce your work and demonstrate its its significance
  • Common sources for background info include news articles, statistics, and websites (books and articles are great too!)

Literature review

  • What existing scholarly research is the closest match to my topic and question?
    • Is there a scholar whose name keeps coming up?
  • Who has done research that's similar to my project, but different in one or two significant aspects?
    • Potential aspects include (among others) geographic area, methodology, identity and demographics, time period, theme(s) emphasized

Research mapping can help with background reading and your literature review

Top journals:

  • American Sociological Review
  • American Journal of Sociology
  • Social Forces
  • Social Problems
grid with covers of sociology journals

How do you read articles from a journal?

Search for the journal title on Tripod. Follow links to get access through Swarthmore's subscription.

Reviewing the literature:

Navigating sociology research

Browzine (link on guide)

  • American Sociological Review
  • American Journal of Sociology
  • Social Forces
  • Social Problems

How do you find articles on your topic that are scholarly?
How do you limit your results to particular journals?


Search for articles using a database that emphasizes scholarly journal articles (peer-reviewed) and lets you choose which journals to include in your search.

For example, Sociological Abstracts >> Link on SOC 16 research guide

Reviewing the literature:

Navigating sociology research

Let's try searching the Sociological Abstracts database for articles related to your topic.


Keep it simple!  Just choose 2-3 keywords for now.

  • For example:  disaster inequality


To expand your results, add a synonym or related word:


 

 

Reviewing the literature:

Sociological Abstracts database

  • American Sociological Review
  • American Journal of Sociology
  • Social Forces
  • Social Problems

Tip: Put related words in one box and write OR in between them.

Reviewing the literature:

Sociological Abstracts database

  • American Sociological Review
  • American Journal of Sociology
  • Social Forces
  • Social Problems

How do you get the PDF for
an article you find in
Sociological Abstracts?


In your search results, click
on the article you want.

Use the FindIt button to search Tripod.

 

In Tripod, follow the Download PDF
or View Online link.


 

Use the search filters to narrow down your results to more relevant articles.  (Click on More > to view the full lists.)

  • Publication title



     
  • Location

     
  • Subject

Reviewing the literature:

Sociological Abstracts database

  • American Sociological Review
  • American Journal of Sociology
  • Social Forces
  • Social Problems

What's another way to limit your search
results to certain journals?


Go to Modify Search

Choose + Add a row

Change the drop-down menu
from Anywhere -> Publication title


Use Look up Publications to find
and add each journal. (Search for the
journal, check the box, then Add to search.)

Reviewing the literature:

Sociological Abstracts database

  • American Sociological Review
  • American Journal of Sociology
  • Social Forces
  • Social Problems

Still want more?

  • Make your results more precise by putting any
    two-word phrases inside quotation marks
    • Hurricane Katrina --> "Hurricane Katrina"
      This will only give you articles that include the exact phrase. Otherwise you'll get articles about hurricanes written by someone named Katrina.
       
  • See this link on the research guide: Improve Your Searches

Reviewing the literature:

Navigating sociology research

  • American Sociological Review
  • American Journal of Sociology
  • Social Forces
  • Social Problems

Other ways to find research:

Reviewing the literature:

Navigating sociology research

  • American Sociological Review
  • American Journal of Sociology
  • Social Forces
  • Social Problems

Staying organized

  1. Document your process
    Consider keeping a simple log of what you work on each day. Some students find it helpful to keep a list of questions and keywords.
     
  2. Be consistent
    Save your sources to the same folder so you can find everything even if you forget what's in an article. Descriptive filenames help.
     
  3. Annotate or categorize sources
    Group similar sources together when you find them, so it's easier to write your literature review. (See Organizing Sources)

Zotero lets you create a personal research library

Features:  save sources easily, categorize into folders, attach notes, generate formatted citations

If you save sources to Zotero (double-check that the info is correct!), you can quickly create formatted citations for your paper.

Or try ZoteroBib (similar to EasyBib, but no ads)

Image credit

Chau, Joe. 2021. Guangzhou City, blue, yellow, and white concrete staircase. Unsplash. https://unsplash.com/photos/6vTw1T0l9gw

Research help

Reach out to talk about your research interests and your project. Discussing your work and asking questions is a great way to build skills.
 

Simon Elichko (social sciences librarian)

Research librarians + RIAs