Action Item:
Read Chapter 1: How Does It Feel to Be Black and Poor from Venkatesh's Gang Leader for a Day here. (For background info, see this post about Chicago Housing Projects Leader for a Day.)
This is the introductory chapter of Venkatesh’s book, Gang Leader for a Day. As you read the chapter, look for all of the ways that Venkatesh gathers data and attempts to study race and poverty. This is from a book published for popular consumption - It is NOT an academic source. We will examine academic sources later in this lesson.NOTE: there is offensive language in the chapter which Venkatesh included in order to preserve the authenticity of his interactions with the people he meets. I tried to redact all of the uses of that, but please do not take the use of this language as making light of the offensivesness of this language.
Most of the research articles have a similar structure. Once you understand the structure, it is easier to find what you need and make sense of the article. Sometimes these sections will even be labeled for you.
Most research articles have a format that looks like this (sometimes a couple of these sections are combined):
2b. Look over the article and see which of these sections can you identify in the article? Note that you don't have to read the whole article. Look for different sections and headings.
Understanding the structure I explained in B above should help you understand the research efficiently and bounce around the article to find what you are looking for.
There are three places that I want you to be aware of for finding primary research.
I. ASA journals
The most recent research in a number of journals is available online for free from the American Sociological Association. The journals page on the ASA website lists the journals along with a description of what is published in them. The journals page is here: https://www.asanet.org/publications/journals/
The most useful journals for our class are the following:
American Sociological Review, ASA’s flagship journal, includes the latest general interest scholarship in sociology that advances our understanding of fundamental social processes through theoretical, methodological, and empirical innovation.
City & Community, a journal of the ASA Section on Community and Urban Sociology, aims to advance urban sociological theory, promote empirical research on communities and urban social life, and encourage sociological perspectives on urban policy.
Journal of Health and Social Behavior publishes empirical and theoretical articles that apply sociological concepts and methods to the understanding of health and illness and the organization of medicine and health care.
Social Psychology Quarterly publishes theoretical and empirical work on the link between the individual and society, including the study of the relations of individuals to one another, as well as to groups, collectivities, and institutions.
Society and Mental Health, a journal of the ASA Section on Sociology of Mental Health, publishes articles that apply sociological concepts and methods to the understanding of the social origins of mental health and illness, the social consequences for persons with mental illness, and the organization and financing of mental health services and care.
Sociology of Education publishes research that examines how social institutions and individuals’ experiences within these institutions affect educational processes and social development.
Sociology of Race vand Ethnicity, a journal of the ASA Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities, publishes sociological research on race and ethnicity across epistemological, methodological, and theoretical orientations.
Socius: Sociological Research for a Dynamic World provides an open access online-only forum for rapid publication of sociological research from any subfield of the discipline.
3a. What article did you find from the journals above? What journal was it from?
Use the journal structure to quickly decide if the article looks interesting to you or not.
II. JSTOR
Here is how to search JSTOR:
(Be sure that you are logged in).
Key Words - Type in the key words/topics that you would like to search. Try different search terms using synonyms such as "school" in one search then "education" in another search.
Narrow Results to Articles - Select only "articles" in the filtering menu on the left side - so you don't get results from reviews or book chapters.
Journal Filter - Scroll down to select "sociology" under search by subject. That will limit your search to only journals that are sociological.
Additional tips for finding research in JSTOR
- Try different search terms - open a few articles in different windows that you might be interested in. Then, try different search terms and open a few more. This might help you find the most relevant articles before you waste time reading one less relevant; quickly read the abstract or introduction to decide if the article is worth looking at in greater detail;
- Start general then narrow - start out with a search for general terms then you can narrow down by adding other terms or dates. One way to do this is to search within the results you find.
Many of these institutions publish reports for the general public so the advantage here is that they are likely going to be easier to read. But the disadvantage is that they will be less thorough.
Below is a list of institutions that publish primary research. I want to point these institutions out both as examples of places you can work and also as sources of primary research.
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