Blackwell Library

 

Holloway Hall

Subject Guide: Geography

Welcome!

The Geography Department at Salisbury University offers a Master's degree in GIS and Public Administration, four Bachelor's Degrees, four departmental Minors, and a Certificate in GIS Fundamentals.  This website is designed to help all students taking any Geography/Geoscience course with their library-research needs. 


 

Journals

We have a great number of print and electronic Geography/Geoscience journals in Blackwell Library.

 Any static list will quickly be outdated - the best way to check and see what titles we currently have is to check online.


Check for journals to which Blackwell Library subscribes
(Some of these titles will be available only in print, some will be in print and electronic format.)

Check for journals to which Blackwell Library has electronic access
(Note that this link will require you to log into Research Port, which requires your Gull Card ID number - the 14-digit number on the back of your Gull Card.)

 


Class Guides

Geography 199 CONSERVATION AND RESOURCE MANAGEMENT 

Examination of the nature, supply, distribution and use of selected natural resources. Emphasis on practical and efficient utilization of soils, farmland, water, forests, energy and mineral resources.

 

Installment #1:  Biography

Basic biographical information is typically straightforward to find.  A basic Google search on your company/organization will get you to their home page (if they have one) and from there you can usually get a good amount of information. 
 


 

Installments #2 and 3:  Who?  What?  Where?  When?  How?

Finding out background information on a company/organization is also typically a straightforward issue.  In this day and age, when even a minor-rate celebrity can't have a cold without the world knowing what type of cold medicine they are using, finding out at least a basic level of information on your company/organization isn't too hard. 

A basic search in our newspaper databases will typically get you a great deal of detailed information - the bigger the company/organization, the more information you will be able to find.  Use the following link to log into the Research Port database server, and from there click on 'N' to search the National Newspapers database.  This database allows you to search four national newspapers all at once - the Christian Science Monitor, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post.  These four newspapers should have some basic information on your company/organization that will get your started in your background information search. 

Note:  if you are physically on-campus when you do this search, you can use a more direct link to the National Newspapers database HERE
 


 

Installments #4, 5, and 6:  History, Philosophy Perception, and Economy

(parts a, b, & c)

a.)  In Installments 4, 5, and 6, you are asked (among other things) to look into the underlying assumptions, beliefs, ethics, and principles, that drive your identity. 

These topics are written about in journal articles that can be found in many business databases - and as such that is a fantastic spot for you to look for them. 

 

b.)  You are also asked, however, to look into media events and current events that will impact your identity.  Searching our newspaper databases once more should get you this information.  Use the following link to log into the Research Port database server, and from there click on 'N' to search the National Newspapers database.  This database allows you to search four national newspapers all at once - the Christian Science Monitor, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post.

 

c.)  Last, but certainly not least, you are asked to look into policies and laws that either amplify or reduce opportunities for your identity.  Where better to search but the government-only search engine 'Google Uncle Sam' to find such policies and laws?
 


 

Installments #7, 8, and 9:  Growth Progress Winners & Losers

These last three installments are pretty much all about resource policies / resource management policies. 

Resource management policies are (at least to my mind) an amalgam of all the other things that you have looked up so far - resulting from and created by the who, the what, the assumptions, beliefs, ethics, media events, identity reactions, policies and laws.  As such, if you go into a few key multi-disciplinary databases and try some global searches on your identity with the keywords "resource policy" or "management policy" or "resource management" you will hopefully find some beneficial results.

I'd recommend that you start in the JSTOR database - it covers about everything you can think of *and* is full text as well. 

After you've done a thorough search of JSTOR (and e-mail me at sebrazer@salisbury.edu if you have trouble finding things in JSTOR!) I'd recommend that you move on to some more general databases:

Academic Search Premier

MasterFILE Premier


 
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The library liaison to Geography is Susan Brazer,
sebrazer@salisbury.edu | 410-546-4370