Background/reference sources
Use these sources to help you pick a topic and to provide context to your research based argument.
Detroit : Gale Research, c1993.
Green Library » Information Center » AG6 .E62 1993
New York : Oxford University Press, c2012.
Law Library (Crown) » Basement » HV6691 .F73 2012
Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, c2009.
Green Library » Stacks » BF637 .D42 D46 2009
Santa Barbara, Calif. : Greenwood Press/ABC-CLIO, c2009.
Green Library » Information Center » Q172.5 .P77 R44 2009
New York, NY : Facts On File, c2000.
Green Library » Information Center » Q157 .E57 2000
2nd ed. London : Academic, 2012.
Green Library » Information Center » BJ63 .E69 2012 V.1
Selected subject searches
Here are some "controlled vocabulary" terms for trauma-related topics. Use the Limiters on the left column of the results list : Topics, Call Numbers (for Subject Area), Location (which library - another clue for subject/perspective), Publication Date, etc.
Suggested databases
When you are just starting, it's a good idea to use the ACADEMIC SEARCH PREMIER database. Besides the selected general and subject-specific databases listed here , try these databases for articles to support your research.
[Bethesda, Md.] : Cambridge Scientific Abstracts
Stanford University Libraries » Online resource » eResource
[San Diego, etc., Sociological Abstracts, inc.]
SAL3 (off-campus storage) » Stacks » HM1 .S67 V.52:NO.6 2004
Ipswich, Mass. : EBSCO Pub., c2005-
Stanford University Libraries » Online resource » eResource
Fun websites recommended by Internet Public Library ipl.org
Try some of these fun databases identified by the Librarian Internet Index and the Internet Public Library
Dubbed "The Quackery Hall of Fame" by the Copley Wire Service, the museum was the world's largest display of what the human mind has devised to cure itself without the benefit of either scientific method or common sense. It comprised the major collections on loan from The American Medical Association, The U.S. Food and Drug Administration, The St. Louis Science Center, The Bakken Library, The National Council Against Health Fraud. The famed collection was donated to the Science Museum of Minnesotain 2002.
From the Mental Floss Website