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Discrimination and the Law PS 4896 004:

Resources for projects in PS 4896 004: Capstone Seminar

What makes an article or book important?

One of the main criteria scholars use for determining the importance of a journal is the number of times articles that appear in the journal get cited or used as references by authors of other articles.  

Citation counts become the scoring system for the importance of a journal.  That is not to say that import research does not appear in other journals. It is just that research is more likely to be noticed and influence the field when it appears in a journal with a history of publishing highly cited articles because that is where other scholars look first. 

The two databases Web of Science  and Google Scholar are the main tools for finding out what these highly cited journals are. 

In fact, Web of Science is limited to the most cited journals and is a good starting point if you want to limit your search to articles from journals with recognized importance. It is one of the smallest, most selective databases.  Google Scholar is the largest and works best when you really know a field of study well, but it is always interesting to compare them. Also try databases more focused on a subject.

Web of Science also has search tools from the record of an article, such as Related Records, Times Cited and Citation Map, that help you discover the invisible college of researchers interested in a topic.