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From: [email protected] (David Novak)
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Subject: Information Research FAQ v.4.7 (Part 3/6)
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Summary: Information Research FAQ: Resources, Tools & Training
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                 Information Research FAQ     (Part 3/6)

           100 pages of search techniques, tactics and theory
         by David Novak of the Spire Project (SpireProject.com)


   Welcome. This FAQ addresses information literacy; the skills, tools and
   theory of information research. Particular attention is paid to the
   role of the internet as both a reservoir and gateway to information
   resources.

   The FAQ is written like a book, with a narrative and pictures. You have
   found your way to part three, so do backtrack to the beginning. If you
   are lost, this FAQ always resides as text at
   http://spireproject.com/faq.txt and http://spireproject.co.uk/faq.txt
   and with pictures at http://spireproject.com/faq.htm

   This FAQ is an element of the Spire Project http://spireproject.com,
   the primary free reference for information research and an important
   resource for search assistance.

   ***    The Spire Project also includes a 3 hour public seminar titled
   ***    Exceptional Internet Research. This is a fast paced seminar
   ***    supported with a great deal of webbing, reaching to skills and
   ***    research concepts beyond the ground covered on our website and
   ***    this FAQ. http://spireproject.com/seminar.htm has a synopsis.
   ***    I am in Europe, seminaring in Ireland and Europe though I
   ***    will be returning to the US shortly, and South Australia for
   ***    a seminar this October.

   Enjoy,
   David Novak - [email protected]
   The Spire Project : SpireProject.com and SpireProject.co.uk

   NOTE FOR RETURN READERS: previously, we prepared this section by
   converting work originally prepared in html. This became unproductive
   so we have limited the internet links in this FAQ and direct you to the
   more lengthy articles prepared in html. All the required links and
   search tool forms reside in other parts of the Spire Project, like the
   websites and free shareware
   (http://spireproject.com/spire_latest_version.zip).



                           Information Venues
                                Section 5


   At the successful completion of his work in Nubia, Shakh was invited to
   travel to Babylon as the assistant to the new ambassador. It had been
   many years since Egyptians were in official contact with the residents
   of the two rivers. All trade had been conducted through the Phoenicians
   living along the Mediterranean coast. With these cities captured by the
   Assyrians, new trade links were needed.

   The journey took much longer than Shakh had expected. Leaving Egypt in
   a simple boat, it took many months to reach the shores of Lebanon,
   where the tall cedar trees grew. These trees, essential to crafting
   fine sea-worthy ships, was just one of the items sought by the
   Egyptians.

   Within two weeks of their arrival in the Assyrian capitol Nineveh, the
   Ambassador fell ill and died. Without guidance, 18 months journey from
   Egypt, Shakh stepped into the position.

   His first task was to gather information both of the officials best to
   approach, and of Egyptian goods most likely to interest the Assyrians.
   With few local contacts, Shakh set about building connections with
   other governments, dining with export officials, collecting information
   about how other governments had succeeded and failed in their trade
   requests with the Assyrians. Shakh knew success would depend on
   approaching the most practical of officials while delicately
   side-stepping the wishes of the officials who threatened, or felt
   threatened, by Egypt.

                       - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

   While it may be practical to divide all information into a collection
   of formats, information is also organized by others for our benefit.
   Libraries, commercial databases, journals, information archives, each
   of these venues will assist you to find particular information. The
   information is already gathered together, classified and organized for
   your benefit. As a skilled researcher, you must be proficient in
   finding information from these resources.

                       - - - - - - - - - - - - - -


                       United Nations Information
            links and more at http://spireproject.com/un.htm

   "The United Nations is involved in every aspect of international life -
   from peace-keeping to the environment, from children's rights to air
   safety. ... The UN system generates an enormous amount of information
   on some of the most pressing issues the world faces ... press releases,
   video and photographic footage, publications, briefing papers, etc."
   Samir Sanbar, A Guide to Information at the United Nations.

   United Nations documents are a recognized authority for any number of
   international issues: social, legal and political. You certainly will
   not be chastised for quoting United Nations statistics. Critical to
   research, the UN is a collection of almost autonomous organizations
   (called organs) with occasionally overlapping responsibilities,
   distinct websites, and recorded as distinct publishers. As you approach
   UN information, remember this is not a monolithic organization with
   clearly defined roles. All drug efforts are not coordinated by the
   UNDCP and all statistical work is not undertaken by the UN Statistical
   Division.

   UN Internet Resources
   The UN website at www.un.org is just one entry point to UN information.
   Of note, it contains a searchable archive of UN press releases
   stretching back to 1995, 7 days of press briefings, an archive section
   and information about UN publications. The real tool to use is UNIONS
   (http://www3.itu.int/unions/search.cgi), a meta-search engine for many
   of the larger UN organ websites.

   UN Library Resources
   The UN is an accomplished publisher, through their sales lists is not
   particularly large. It is just that anything they do publish is of a
   very high standard. Many documents are generated by the numerous
   meetings and efforts, so there is a second style of publishing, called
   Masthead or UNDoc documents, that are usually just photocopies. UNDoc
   are found in a collection of UN depository libraries around the world.
   (There is a good list at http://www.un.org/MoreInfo/Deplib/). Thus we
   have the UNDoc primary source documents and UN Sales Documents, given a
   sales document number and sold and shelved in libraries as books.

   S/1997/742/Add.1, Report of the Secretary-General on the situation
   concerning Western Sahara: a brief breakdown of the estimated costs for
   completing the voter identification process in Western Sahara.

   Other documents have wider appeal...

   E.96.I.5, The United Nations and the International Tribunals for the
   former Yugoslavia and Rwanda - UN Blue Book Series

   S/1997/742/Add.1, Abortion Policies: A Global Review, Population
   studies No. 129: A three volume, 650 page country-by-country look at
   abortion.

   You can use the US Library of Congress Online Catalogue for a good
   approximate search of UN Sales documents. A search of UNDoc documents
   requires one of three comprehensive databases, like UN-Bis Plus, though
   you can also get the numbers to specific documents through UN
   periodicals like the Yearbook of the United Nations and the United
   Nations Chronicle.

   With 300+ shelves of UN documents at depository libraries, the UNDoc
   files are excellent records to history. The UNDoc Current Index (ceased
   publication in 1996) is an extensive quarterly directory (of the
   non-cumulative kind) just for this purpose.

   Further tools are available to help the dedicated searcher, like
   focused indexes and an annual list of current sales documents (also
   online).

   Trouble with Age
   United Nations publications do suffer time lags. The best documents
   appear well after the curve of public interest. Primary UNDOC documents
   will take up to 6 months before becoming available at a UN depository
   library and the Sales Documents are compiled after this. On the
   positive side, UN archives frequently extend back to the 1950s.

   Information Theory
   The UN has existed since the 1950s. The systems established to manage
   and distribute access to UN publications is at once both highly
   sophisticated and out-of-date. It is truly amazing to see 300 shelves
   of UN documents (a very big room mainly filled with stapled
   photocopies).

   At the same time, it is only a matter of time before the whole concept
   of UN depository library is translated online. There is such potential
   savings (there are 359 depository libraries in the world but the UN
   pays for one in each country) and such an improvement in access.

   All the links and a few of the forms for searching UN information
   reside at http://spireproject.com/un.htm
   ___________________________________________________


                          Government Information
            links and more at http://spireproject.com/gov.htm

   We pay a high price in both direct and indirect taxes for our
   government. These are intelligent people, paid to be informed.
   Government experts and documents are thus generally detailed, factual
   and reliable ... and helpful. It should not surprise you that
   government documents have a high quality, tend to have a little problem
   with time.

   Central to finding government information on the web is the way the
   clear organizational structure is replicated online. Each country will
   have a primary website with links to the websites of each national
   government department. Each state will have a primary website with
   links to the websites of each state government department. Each
   department website will link to all sub-departments. If you wanted to
   see the website for the New Zealand statistical agency, just visit the
   New Zealand government website, then look for the statistical agency.
   If you wanted to see the website for the Mississippi government agency
   responsible for childcare, just visit the US government website, find
   Mississippi, then look for an agency that might be responsible for the
   family, then keep clicking till you find the page you need.

   With a little more maturity, many corporate website were redesigned to
   present answers as they are needed by the visitors - instead of having
   marketing, accounting and distribution directories, websites were
   rearranged to have sections for customer sales, investor relations and
   distributor relations. Government website have begun the transformation
   too, with websites serving the perceived needs of visitors. Clever
   sites will present both structures but some will have an alternative
   structure linking you through to the agency website.

   * There are two fine internet directories of international government
   websites, one by the University of Michigan Documents Center, another
   by the University of Southern California.

   * There is a specialized, government-only webpage search engine called
   GovBot as developed by The Center for Intelligent Information Retrieval
   (CIIR). Altavista and All-the-Web also let you restrict a large global
   search to a specific domain. This allows you to search just for .gov
   sites.

   * Government Publications are effectively organized in a national
   publication database. The US MOCAT database (Monthly Catalog of US
   Government Publications), the Australian AGIP (Australian Government
   Index of Publications (AGIP) and the United Kingdom Stationery Office
   publications list are all free online.

   For information not available, many nations permit Freedom of
   Information (FOI) requests. This essentially forces government agencies
   to release information they can not justify keeping secret. FOI
   requests may cost you a token fee (and is often less for members of the
   media). The Electronic Frontiers Foundation (EFF) maintains a good FOI
   archive (http://www.eff.org/Activism/FOIA/), as does the Society of
   Professional Journalists (http://spj.org/foia/index.htm).
   ___________________________________________________


                          Commercial Databases
         links and more at http://spireproject.com/database.htm

   Commercial databases are simply collections of information presented
   electronically. Databases range in size from simple books made
   searchable, to several billion records in the larger news databases.
   The retail database industry is obscure. Costs are highly variable and
   difficult to determine in advance. Products with the same name may
   contain different information. Databases are frequently combined into
   larger collections of databases, (also called databases,) often several
   times, so an individual magazine or database may exist within several
   databases and several collections.

   Within this confusion are a collection of definitive, must-search
   databases. Definitive databases are determined by successful marketing.
   Not necessarily the 'best', nor most useful, but the market-successful
   become definitive resources. From there, success breeds further value.
   Such databases will be invaluable in your search for answers. More
   discussion on the database industry can be found in section 9 of this
   FAQ.

   Free Databases
   At the edge of the database industry are a number of prominent
   databases that have emerged as free databases, delivered over the
   internet directly from their source. Look briefly at some of these
   databases:

   * ERIC, (Education Resources Information Center) is presented by the
   [US] National Library of Education. Established in 1966, ERIC is one of
   the cornerstone databases for the education field and provides
   citations & abstracts to education-related literature.

   * CRIS, (Current Research Information System) is produced by the US
   Dept of Agriculture (USDA) and includes Canadian, USDA, and Czech
   agriculture, food and forestry research. Projects sponsored by these or
   affiliated agencies are included

   * Agricola is produced by the [US] National Agricultural Library and
   its cooperators. This is an important bibliographic database covering
   agriculture and all the related disciplines (including forestry &
   agri-business & alternative agriculture). Started in 1970, this has
   become an important database limited only by its bibliographic nature.

   * Thomas, presented by the [US] Library of Congress, delivers US
   legislative information (including Congress, Representatives, Senate &
   the many committee reports).

   * EDGAR, produced by the (US) Securities and Exchange Commission,
   delivers all public US company submissions as required by law. The
   information is factual and numerical - and includes both current and
   past submissions.

   * MOCAT, UKOP and AGIP are the US, UK and Australian government
   publication databases

   * The Library of Congress, The British Library, and The National
   Library of Australia card catalogues can be searched online.

   * Medline is produced by the [US] National Library of Medicine and
   delivers references to all areas of medicine (including nursing,
   dentistry, nutrition), with some abstracts.

   * The United States Department of Energy (DOE) publishes The DOE
   Information Bridge, a database with full-text and bibliographic records
   of DOE-sponsored research and development. Covers research projects in
   energy sciences and technology.

   * BIOGRAPHY(r) Online is published at www.biography.com and includes
   15000+ biographical abstracts - but most are really really short.

   For more free bibliographic databases, I strongly suggest you read
   Bases de donn�es gratuites (http://urfist.univ-lyon1.fr/gratuits.html)
   by Jean-Pierre Lardy. This directory has over 200 entries! Use the
   Altavista Babelfish to have a look at it.

   All Databases
   Gale Research produces the Gale Directory of Databases (in 2 volumes).
   This is the definitive listing of databases in the world, for the
   moment. Most large libraries will have a copy. New editions are
   released every 6 months.

   There are also smaller, more focused directories like Fulltext Sources
   Online published by Information Today or The Directory of Australian
   and New Zealand Databases by the Australian Database Development
   Association (ADDA).

   Database Industry
   You will access commercial databases through one of five basic sources.

   1_ From a Commercial Database Retailer,
   2_ From alternatively funded (free) internet sources,
   3_ Through a Library or other venue with a site license,
   4_ With the help of an Information Professional (searching for you),
   5_ Directly from the source with a personal subscription.

   Consider the Commercial Database Retailer as the department store of
   the information market. The industry is dominated by a handful of
   dedicated retailers like The Dialog Corporation, Lexis-Nexis, and
   InfoMart. Other retailers focus on certain types of databases.

   Retailers select the databases they carry, and enjoy mark-ups in the
   region of 300% to 400% from which they provide customer service,
   support and promotion. So very much service and promotion is provided
   that these retail giants hold a pivotal role in the distribution of
   commercial databases.

   The most important selection tool for databases is the database
   description. These are factual, accurate descriptions of what each
   database includes and how they can be searched.

   Many of the database descriptions are online. To facilitate finding
   these, we have added links here and in other articles. Further
   descriptions may be available from retailer websites.

   A list of database retailers follow.

   * The Dialog Corporation (http://www.dialog.com), a merger of Dialog,
   Datastar and M.A.I.D. The largest database retailer by far, the
   databases are general.
   * Lexis-Nexis especially carries full text and legal research
   databases.
   * Questel/Orbit specializes in patent and technical science databases
   * EINS (European Information Network Services) appears offer discount
   access to technical databases.
   * Infomart Dialog (Canada) has Canadian coverage with many of the
   Dialog databases.
   * FT Profile is the information wing of Financial Times (UK).

   There are further database retailers specifically focused on the
   library market like OCLC's FirstSearch. Further databases are focused
   on business needs, like DowJones and Dun & Bradstreet.

   In addition, there are always the individual databases which undertake
   the difficult task of retailing by themselves.

   Conclusion
   Databases are complex structures based on the inverted index and on a
   range of search technologies including Boolean terms, truncation,
   complex limits, descriptors, filters, ranking and more. Certainly the
   technology is becoming easier to use (look at the Reuters Business
   Briefing for state of the art), but there is still much to learn. An
   experienced searcher will locate far better results than a novice.
   However, an uninvolved searcher has a handicap, both in price and
   language. Sometimes it is wise to get help searching a database,
   sometimes it is not.

   The commercial database industry is shifting to use the internet as the
   preferred delivery vehicle. Considerable changes are coming too - not
   the least a tumble in the price of information.

   Another change is a move towards full text databases. Some databases
   include only bibliographic information, many provide abstracts, but
   only a small fraction include full text. This will frustrate you deeply
   as full text databases are so very very convenient.

   Researching databases is incredibly difficult and cumbersome. They
   challenge the mind, stretch far beyond the simple skills of searching
   the internet, and since every minute is expensive, there is much added
   pressure.

   But this is a skill like any other. Practice with the databases of your
   local research university at an off-peak time (mornings are good) and
   using the CD-ROM versions - learn on something free and not 2$ a
   minute.

   A database is a collection of anything - meaning a database blissfully
   passes on the chaos for us to deal with rather than presenting a more
   logical/understandable front like the web (humour intended). This
   character has also blurred the contours of a database. Most small
   databases are merely digested versions of small books and directories,
   often made available to you at 50 cents a page. Of course, large
   databases are just hard to conceive, let alone describe.
   Word-searchable libraries? World knowledge snapshots? Commercial
   information marketing firms go further and group similar databases
   together into massive multi-database topic searches with phenomenal
   power.

   A Myriad of Databases
   A primary difficulty comes from the sheer number of databases in
   existence today. To get a feel for the size of this industry, stop by a
   large library and ask for the Gale Directory of Databases Volume 1: the
   partially definitive listing of global databases. The absolute number
   will astound you. This also explains why some of us are so excited
   about internet development. Just making the existing databases more
   easily available will transform our society. The Information age is
   just starting.

   Database Quality
   All research is guided by the resources at hand. Most amateur
   researchers suffer because they have very few resources at hand (or
   think they do). Research is also guided by the budget, the time and
   perhaps the skill. When selecting research databases, try to be aware
   of three further factors:

   Coverage
   Research here is easiest on Australian, British and American resources.
   This may be unfortunate or of little consequence, but does bear
   consideration. Many large databases are also large only because of
   their range of information. Which is better, searching 6000 magazines
   or 600 business magazines. Depends on the research topic.

   Definitive
   There are many databases which can claim definitive coverage but there
   are many more which should be kept in reserve. Just like the internet,
   a researcher is not expected to look at everything relevant, just
   enough to get to the solution.

   Size
   Global Textline was a database of phenomenal size, indexing text from
   over a hundred newspapers globally, reaching back many years.
   Australian Education Index (AEI) includes the contents of a small book
   of Education related theses abstracts. Each topic may only include 10
   relevant theses over 5 years. Size is a thus linked to database value.
   Searching Global Textline will always turn up leads. AEI will not.

   Selecting a Database
   Despite the factual nature of information research, word of mouth
   appears to be tremendously important in choosing databases. Some guides
   do describe the quality of various databases, and make valuable
   suggestions, but such guides also age rapidly as new products emerge. A
   rough understanding may emerge with practice. Our advice appears in
   other articles.
   ___________________________________________________


                            Discussion Groups
          links and more at http://spireproject.com/discuss.htm

   Mailing Lists, Newsgroups, Associations - each are focal points of
   discussion, exchange of information and professional development.
   Sometimes called Special Interest Groups (SIGs), these are the original
   sources of many fine research resources. Brilliant research sites in
   their own right, a mailing list, newsgroup or association can also be a
   fine contact point for experts, or the site of focused, specialized
   libraries.

   The copyright mailing list is a group of more than 100 lawyers who
   focus on copyright. This list, and their Copyright FAQ, are the best
   resources on copyright law in the world; current, factual, and
   peer-reviewed. This is not unusual for a mailing list. As a source of
   experts, I once found an accomplished but poorly published scientist
   from an old message in a mailing list archive.

   Having said this, discussion groups are not organized for casual
   searching. Even when discussion is archived and searchable, finding and
   searching past discussion tends to be difficult. There is more to this
   resource than just asking a question but the other options are not
   simple.

   Mailing Lists
   * Tile.Net/Lists (http://tile.net/lists/) has a fine index of mailing
   lists.
   * Liszt is the second place to look.
   * The Directory of Scholarly and Professional E-Conferences, known also
   as the Kovacs Lists is third.
   * subject guides listed in the Argus Clearinghouse also refer to
   relevant mailing lists.

   Search several list directories for more rewarding results. Also keep
   in mind some lists have too little or too much traffic for your
   purpose. Find a list with a manageable number of messages and a wide
   enough membership. This takes a little effort in interrogating the list
   management software for the number of forum members, a look at past
   discussion, perhaps a look for supporting websites.

   Newsgroups
   If you have a newsgroup reader, you have a file called news.rc on your
   computer which lists all the available on your computer. List.com also
   has a searchable list of newsgroups. Duke University can help you find
   additional newsgroups that exist but require you to ask your ISP to
   bring in.

   A more effective approach is to undertake a search of past newsgroup
   posts and select from the response a list of likely newsgroups to
   consider. Altavista allows searches of recent newsgroup messages.
   Deja.com has an even larger archive (to before March '95).

   Another option is to search for an FAQ (like this one). Most summarize
   past discussion on successful newsgroups. The FAQ may be a brilliant
   informative document in itself, or the definitive pointer to further
   tools and resources. By virtue of its public origin, FAQs are far more
   likely to attract the peer review often very lacking from other
   resources. They are also open invitations to communicate with the
   knowledgeable FAQ maintainers.

   * FAQs can be searched by title by sites like Oxford University and
   Universiteit Utrecht (Netherlands), or if you know a newsgroup, visit
   an html FAQ archive like the one at http://www.faqs.org

   Associations
   Associations are more involved than their internet companion.
   Associations are also more into paper publishing, conferencing and
   collating specialist statistics. As an example, the Australian
   Booksellers Association publishes the best benchmark statistics on this
   topic. When approaching an association, consider asking for their
   publications list.

   Directory of Associations are national directories. The [US]
   Encyclopedia of Associations is produced by Gale Research. The
   Directory of Australian Associations is the definitive Australian
   source. Directory of Associations in Canada. Directory of Association
   of Asia.

   Some association directories have emerged online, like Directory of the
   American Society of Association Executives. Unfortunately, the database
   is small & Americanocentric. A search for 'book' did get me the address
   of the American Booksellers Association, but not others. Of course if
   you have a name, you could also use a meta-search engine like
   Debriefing. Alternatively, the Library of Congress Online Catalogue
   allows us to search for association as an author.

   Conclusions
   There are three important research applications for mailing lists.1)
   Research through past discussion, 2) Directly ask members for
   assistance, 3) Become a participative member to pick up and exchange
   information. On a personal side, mailing lists are easy to use and a
   minimal investment in time (the information comes to you). However,
   mailing lists are difficult to develop and maintain. Few reach the
   potential brilliance of this form of communication, so many of the
   forums you come across will be non-existent or on their death-bed.

   Mailing lists depend on four vital ingredients - Content,
   Participation, IT-support, and Management. Often, one of these go wrong
   and the forum dies. As a member, there are important obligations
   starting with participation, and ending with forum etiquette.

   The better forums are private. Membership is not automatic, the list
   manager has more control, and often, more control and effort is
   expended developing interesting content and discussion. If you find a
   closed or private forum, persevere.

   Associations
   When a group of like-minded individuals come together to achieve an
   aim, they often create an association. What better place to research.
   Even better, associations often interpret their purpose as a place to
   pool and distribute information. Larger associations often maintain a
   small library of their own and many associations publish documents
   about their area of interest. Furthermore, if you are seeking an expert
   in a given field, associations are sure to have one, or two, or many.
   For the smaller associations, be polite but firm in describing your
   interest and be ready to buy whatever small book they do publish in
   your quest for further information.

   The FAQ
   An FAQ is created to enhance the discussion of a newsgroup. After a
   time, the initial members of a newsgroup would have discussed many of
   the standard topics to death, which newcomers will still find
   interesting. To prevent only discussing introductory topics (and
   annoying long-term members) an FAQ is created to record answers to
   standard questions.

   Because one of the primary functions of a special interest group is
   resource discovery - and because FAQs are collectively created, they
   are valuable and generally reliable. I consider the Official Copyright
   FAQ the best document in the world on copyright law.

   As an aside, many FAQs are also available as web pages. Trouble is,
   without an system to vet true newsgroup FAQs, you are far more likely
   to encounter FAQs which have not been vetted by the news.answers team.
   The Official Copyright FAQ is 70+ pages of topical and factual detail
   with links to further information. There are several other copyright
   FAQs with less than 10 pages, (and not particularly concerned with
   providing information). Access an established FAQ archive for your
   FAQs. www.faqs.org has a small list (http://www.faqs.org/#FAQHTML).
   Another longer list resides midway down this document
   (http://www.faqs.org/faqs/news-answers/introduction).

   Special interest groups are problematic because the task of preparing
   and presenting guidance is secondary to their main aims. Those that do
   actively publish do so through books (with the association as the
   author) or articles or newsprint... Sometimes, as in mailing lists,
   almost as an afterthought, past discussion is indexed and searchable.

   This situation is not likely to change. Technology could potentially
   aggregate past discussion from many mailing lists, but too much
   commercialism would swiftly kill open discussion. Then again, existing
   efforts like the archive of the business librarians list have taken a
   very proprietary view of messages within their discussion. Notice also
   that a database of newsletters failed commercially a few years back for
   lack of interest. No dramatic improvements are likely to emerge from
   this direction.
   ___________________________________________________


                               The Library
          links and more at http://spireproject.com/library.htm

   Libraries are integral parts to the research process if for no other
   reason than public funds are used to buy the expensive research tools
   you will occasionally use. More and more libraries are extending their
   reference collections to include CD-ROMs and computer resources.

   Specialty libraries are special. Focus allows for far greater expertise
   and innovative research resources. Specialty libraries are prime
   research venues, and specialty librarians are considerable reservoirs
   of research expertise. All government agencies, and many large
   corporations & wealthy associations, have specialty libraries. While
   many may not invite public access, almost all are universally open to
   you.

   * Very large libraries, by virtue of their sheer size, become important
   research resources. This would include the US Library of Congress, the
   British Library, the [UK] COPAC unified library catalogue, the National
   Library of Australia, and the National Library of Canada.

   * To find a specific library websites, visit either Libweb
   (http://sunsite.Berkeley.edu/Libweb/ ) or Libdex
   (http://www.libdex.com) or a few other link sites.

   * A directory of specialist libraries will direct you to the highly
   focused libraries found within corporate, association or government
   organizations. An Australian directory exists online. The Directory of
   Special Libraries in Australia by ALIA is the definitive source.
   American Library Directory is a commercial database and probably a
   print directory too.

   Note: All these libraries will probably let you access information - if
   you come asking kindly with specific information in mind. Always ask
   how you would gain access, and assume access is possible (though not
   policy).

   There are also a collection of mixed information directories which are
   research-worthy. Croner's A-Z of [UK] Business Information Sources and
   the Aslib Directory of Information Sources in the United Kingdom are
   prominent examples. These directories appear to be less than definitive
   but the ASLIB Directory (the larger of the two at 1500+ pages) is
   certainly something to behold. Aslib, under the subject "Egypt" lists
   the British Museum, the Egypt Exploration Society, the Tutankhamun
   Exhibition, and the York College of Further & Higher Education - all
   with really good contact details.
   ___________________________________________________


                       Zines, Magazines & Journals
          links and more at http://spireproject.com/period.htm

   Zines, Magazines, Journals and Newsletters; each incorporate the
   valuable services of quality control, editorial input, and focus.
   Newsprint, though similar in concept, is best dealt with separately.

   The trouble with using periodicals in research is their unfocussed view
   of the world. Reading through a topical periodical is such a passive
   approach to finding information. The information is likely to be
   interesting, but hardly likely to answer your questions. At best, you
   are 'keeping up-to-date' in your field.

   The solution to this is the database search of either full-text or
   bibliographic/abstract information from a great many periodicals.

   Before we reach for the database search, let us run through the ways to
   find periodicals.

   * Zines are listed in three primary online directories: John Labovitz's
   E-Zine-list, the NewJour mailing list, the ARL Directory of Electronic
   Journals, and by browsing some of the university zine collections.

   * Print periodicals are listed in three primary directories: Ulrich's
   International Periodical Directory, EBSCO's Serial Directory, and
   Newsletters in Print, and by browsing the periodical collections of
   primary libraries like the Library of Congress.

   * A few further online lists of periodicals exist like one for US
   magazines and another for Australian Magazines.

   Since periodicals are a passive form of research, a search for
   promising periodicals is not the usual way of doing a search.
   Organizations will often subscribe to promising periodicals then
   circulate them among interested parties, facilitating the passive
   collection of information.

   The directories above represent one way to find promising periodicals.
   A better way is to search the databases for promising articles, then
   paying attention to promising periodicals which appear frequently.
   ___________________________________________________
                   This document continues as Part 4/6
   ___________________________________________________
   Copyright (c) 1998-2001 by David Novak, all rights reserved. This FAQ
   may be posted to any USENET newsgroup, on-line service, website, or BBS
   as long as it is posted unaltered in its entirety including this
   copyright statement. This FAQ may not be included in commercial
   collections or compilations without express permission from the author.
   Please send permission requests to [email protected]