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Sourcewatch.info
Featuring
top sources and resources for researchers, students
and anyone needing information, experts, and expertise.
Sourcewatch.info spotlights quality information resources for researchers, journalists, students and others with serious information needs. We proceed from the assumption that no one information resource can meet all your needs. While the sources listed on this site are primarily electronic, it remains true that printed resources in libraries, archives, and bookstores contain a wealth of information that is not available online. Some of the most important links below are the ones that lead to library and archive catalogues, which in turn lead to printed materials.
Only a minority of research materials are available online, and only a minority of online materials are available on the Internet. Even of materials on the Internet, only a minority can be queried by search engines. One estimate is that the “Deep Web” or “Invisible Web” contains 500 times as much information as is available through search engines such as Google. (See Dean Tudor's article in Sources Select Resource for more on this.) The most optimistic estimates suggest that Google indexes fewer than 10% of the pages available on the Internet. Worth keeping in mind when you feel inclined to believe that a Google search, or a visit to Wikipedia, will tell you everything you need to know about a topic.
It's also always worth keeping in mind that for many subjects, especially news and current events, the best sources are human sources: the experts, authorities and spokespeople who live and breathe those subjects. The best resource for finding experts willing to answer journalists' questions is Sources, the directory of experts, media contacts and spokespersons.
Selected Quality Information Resources
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| Current topics, experts, newsmakers, media contacts |
Sources comprehensive subject index for journalists, writers, news editors, researchers looking for experts, spokespersons, scientists, lobbyists, officials, speakers, university professors, researchers, newsmakers, media relations contacts, talk show guests, PR representatives, story ideas, universities, associations, research institutions, lobby groups, NGOs. |
| Sources Directory |
The directory of experts media contacts spokespersons news sources.
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| Sources Calendar |
Check out newsworthy events from across Canada. |
| News Releases |
Media releases from Canadian organizations, companies and institutions. |
| Getting publicity |
How to raise your profile and get media coverage with Sources, the directory of experts media contacts spokespeople and news sources. |
| Media Names & Numbers |
Directory of Canada's print & broadcast media – Canadian media lists: televison, radio stations, newspapers, magazines, community, campus, ethnic publications. |
| Canadian government directory |
Parliamentary Names & Numbers – Contact information for Canada’s federal & provincial governments, MPs, Senators, MLAs, ministries, agencies, political parties, lobbyists. |
| Connexions Library |
A catalogue of more than 5,000 resources dealing with social justice, human rights, civil liberties, environment, democratization — Title Index or Subject Index or Author Index including more than 1,000 full-text articles. |
| Sources HotLink |
Media relations newsletter with tips and practical ideas to get positive news coverage. |
| Amicus |
Canadian national catalogue giving search access to over 30 million records from 1,300 Canadian libraries including Library and Archives Canada. English and French. |
Archives Canada |
Search archival holdings across Canada. Access provincial and Territorial Archival Networks. View digitized photographs, maps, documents and online exhibits developed around Canada's history. |
| Bureau of Public Secrets |
Articles from a Situationist perspective. |
| Canada411 |
Online phone directory. |
| Canadian Encyclopedia Online |
Canadian history and much else about Canada. English and French. |
| Chomsky.info |
The Noam Chomsky website. |
| Clusty |
Instead of delivering search results in one long list, Clusty groups similar results together into clusters that help you see your search results by topic so you can zero in on exactly what you're looking for or discover unexpected relationships between items. |
Google Scholar |
Search scholarly literature. From one place, you can search across many disciplines and sources: peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, abstracts and articles. |
| Guardian Weekly |
A global view on the week's international events. |
| ibiblio |
Conservancy of freely available digital information, including software, music, literature, art, history, science, politics, and cultural studies. |
| IceRocket |
Blog research tool. |
| Kartoo |
Meta-search engine that presents results in clusters of interactive maps. |
| Libcom |
A resource for all people who wish to fight to improve their lives, their communities and their working conditions. |
| Library of Congress Web site |
Gateway to massive amounts of information. Main site of the U.S. Library of Congress. |
Libweb |
Library servers via WWW. Lists over 7700 pages from libraries in 145 countries. |
| Marxmail |
Marxism mailing list: worldwide moderated forum for activists and scholars in the Marxist tradition who favor a non-sectarian and non-dogmatic approach. Puts a premium on independent thought and rigorous but civil debate. |
| Marxists Internet Archive |
The most complete library of Marxism with content in over 40 languages and the works of over 400 authors readily accessible by archive, subject, or history. |
| Middle East Conflict Resources |
Israel/Palestine: Selected resources for peace justice and human rights. |
News & Letters |
Working out a philosophy of liberation that spells out an alternative to both capitalism-imperialism and religious fundamentalist terrorism. |
| Online Books Page |
Listing over 25,000 free books on the Web. |
| Project Gutenberg |
Free online electronic library of thousands of books. |
| Radical Digressions |
A left-libertarian perspective. |
| Skeptical Inquirer |
Encourages the critical investigation of paranormal and fringe-science claims from a responsible, scientific point of view and disseminates factual information about the results of such inquiries to the scientific community and the public. Also promotes science and scientific inquiry, critical thinking, science education, and the use of reason in examining important issues. |
Wikipedia - English |
Multilingual user-edited encyclopedia. |
| Wikipedia - Français |
Projet d'encyclopédie librement distribuable. Plus de 500,000 articles en français. |
| Wikipedia - Deutsch |
Ein Projekt zum Aufbau einer Enzyklopädie aus freien Inhalten in Mehr also 600 00 artikel in deutscher Sprache. |
| Wikipedia - Español |
Edición en español de Wikipedia. |
| Yahoo |
Internet directory. |
Other sites |
Other sites worth checking. |
Feature
Article: Using the Library of Parliament
Most
journalists spend a lot of time cultivating sources; few cultivate
the Parliamentary Library. It appears at times that only the more
erudite of journalists avail themselves of this major convenient
source. Possibly others are using the Unites States Information
Service Library, even more conveniently located in the National
Press Building. (One wonders if any other government has placed
a foreign library in so advantageous a position.) Nevertheless,
many journalists over the years have praised our services, acknowledging
our assistance in their books, in their letters, and in conversation.
You yourself just may find that, in the long run, tapping the library's
services pays off in terms of substance and accuracy, though not
necessarily in sensation.
The key to getting
the most out of the Library of Parliament is to anticipate your
needs. Our resources are vast and the staff is very busy, so if
it's at all posible, don't wait until the last moment. If you make
an effort to anticipate areas in which stories may break, the Library
staff can help you gather background knowledge beforehand. That'll
give you an edge over some of your more harried or more superficial
colleagues. Or if you know you are to prepare a series on the "Tolls
on the St. Lawrence Seaway", let us know as soon as possible.
We can help you put together a reading list or chart a research
path, among other things.
Our extensive
services are available on a confidential basis in English and French,
tailored to meet individual needs. Library publications provide
studies of policy issues, reading lists and current files of articles
of special interest to parliamentarians. We provide research assistance,
information and other services to parliamentarians and their staffs,
parliamentary committees, associations and delegations, senior Senate
and House of Commons officials, the Governor-General, Privy Councillors,
and Justices of the Supreme and Federal Courts as well as to Press
Gallery members. A staff of more than 240 librarians, research officers,
technicians and support personnel answered more than 80,000 inquiries
and prepared more than 2,500 research papers for parliamentarians
in 1987-88.
The library
has two service branches: Information and Technical Services, and
Research.
The Information
and Technical Services Branch, with 45 professional librarians,
anticipates and responds to requests for information and prepares
retrieval and reference aids. Its role is to develop, acquire, make
accessible, conserve and maintain library collections, three branch
libraries, a reading room, the main Library and the Parliamentary
Reading Room. The staff alerts clients to sources of new and newly-acquired
information, including books, serials, reports, briefs, parliamentary
papers, government publications, databases, press clippings, wire
services, microforms, videotapes, audio tapes, and maps. In addition
to Canadian federal, provincial, and territorial publications, the
Library has British Parliamentary Papers of both the House Of Lords
and the House of Commons, French parliamentary debates since 1945
(older ones have been turned over to the National Library), the
United States Congressional Record, and many other Congressional
publications, as well as material on other foreign parliaments and
parliamentarians.
Our Clipping
File is another unique and valuable Library resource. More than
20 daily newspapers are scanned for selections to add to the nearly
3,000 current files on topics of interest to parliamentarians, including
files on each M.P. and all bills before either chamber. In addition,
we have a little-known collection of manuscripts/typescripts of
books about Parliament written by parliamentarians and others, including
journalists.
Microfilms and microfiches,
audio and videotapes and optical disks, among other contemporary
information storage and retrieval systems, augment the Library's
print collection. Most of the Library's collection is available
online.
More than 1,000 outside online databases also can be accessed
through the Library. The only way to truly appreciate all this
is to use it. Those who do find it surprisingly adequate.
The Research
Branch, established in 1964 in a small way, now comprises 55 professional
research officers-- including lawyers, economists, political, social
and natural scientists--and support staff. Its mandate is to assist
MPs, Senators, parliamentary committees, associations and delegations
in preparing research studies and technical briefings on request,
and to initiate and prepare background papers and reviews of current
issues. Services to parliamentary committees include the assignment
of subject specialists, recommendations on selection of witnesses,
provision of briefing material, analytical studies and oral presentations,
collations of analysis of evidence, and assistance in drafting reports.
Although we cannot make the services of the research branch available
to non-parliamentarians, members of the Press Gallery may request
copies of the Branch's Publications List and of specific publications
dealing with national and international issues of interest to federal
parliamentarians. Others may obtain copies of these invaluable studies
from the Canadian Government Publishing Centre, part of the Department
of Supply and Services.
Despite automation,
the important past is still largely locked in print. To understand
the present and occasionally provide guidance for the future,
most journalists, whether TV, radio or print, could benefit from
a greater familiarity with Library resources. Our staff is the
greatest resource of all. You can really depend on the professional
services of this or other libraries, even more than you can depend
on your friends and their memories. Your time will seldom be better
spent.
En francais:
Employer
la bibliotheque du Parlement
www.sourcewatch.info
SourceWatch.info
c/o Sources, 489 College Street, Suite 305, Toronto, ON M6G 1A5.
Phone: (416) 964-7799 FAX: (416) 964-8763

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