Research can be difficult, but you don't have to start from scratch if you follow the clues left by scholars who have gone before you!
As you conduct your research, you will need to make note of the additional resources (book, book chapter, journal article) you identify in the bibliographies, references, notes, and footnotes of the sources you are using. The reason for this? Because this is one of the best ways to further your research.
Example:
Let's say you found this very relevant article:
Silverman, R. M., & Patterson, K. L. (2012). The Four Horsemen of the Fair Housing Apocalypse: A Critique of Fair Housing Policy in the USA. Critical Sociology (Sage Publications, Ltd), 38(1), 123-140
And you read it and it is just great for your research. The next thing to do is look at the list of references and follow-up on any that look relevant. This is a great way to build your bibliography, to find like materials.
If the article is really great for your research, and you have checked the references used by the author/s, you can look and see if the article has been cited by anyone else since it was published.
This is the original great article:
Silverman, R. M., & Patterson, K. L. (2012). The Four Horsemen of the Fair Housing Apocalypse: A Critique of Fair Housing Policy in the USA. Critical Sociology (Sage Publications, Ltd), 38(1), 123-140
There are several ways to see who has cited the article, but one of the best and easiest ways is to use
Google Scholar
Once in google scholar, type/paste in the title of the original article.
Look for the - cited by.
Also the Web of Science.
(as of April 2023)
To make sure you see the links to the fulltext for those items we own do one of two things:
1. Use Google Scholar as a database
(https://scholar.google.com/scholar?inst=15032367935592116327)
2. Make sure the Library Links list
Open WorldCat - Library Search
University of Maryland Libraries - Find @ UMD
Follow these steps:
Click on the Menu on the Upper Left
Click on Settings
Click on Library Links
Please email Judy if you do not find what you need
For Books - use UMD Discover
For Articles - There are a couple of ways to determine if we own the article and in what format.
1. Use UMD Discover or Articles and type in the article title
2. Use Google Scholar (https://scholar.google.com/scholar?inst=15032367935592116327)
3. Google and use the Reload button (http://lib.guides.umd.edu/reload-button)