AOC resource list created by Rebecca Hyde (U.S. Government Information Librarian; Urban Studies & Planning Librarian) (click here for doc)
USP resource list created by Rebecca Hyde (click here for doc)
Keith’s Bibliographic guide to literature
Compiled by Keith Pezzoli, last updated 2004 (more current version in progress)
The guide is designed to help students locate useful work as they embark on an original research project of their own. Not all of the publications listed here address urban and regional planning in a direct fashion. Some of it, for instance, has a strictly methodological focus. The intent is to provide a kind of “ecology of knowledge” by virtue of bringing together fragmented niches of work under one roof (or should I say “table”—of contents).
Resources for Using Encyclopedias, Dictionaries, and Knowledge Maps to explore concepts.
Encyclopedias and dictionaries are an excellent way to get an overview of your key concepts and topics of interest. I pulled together a great selection of key terms and concepts from a few high quality sources that you may find useful: http://seniorsequence.net/?page_id=195
Journals and on-line sources:
Many of the articles listed in the guide under the heading “journals and on-line sources” can be found on the Internet using one of several databases. The Sage publication database has many planning journals and journal articles. Other databases include ScienceDirect , International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences , Google Scholar , among others (see below). Many of these databases can only be accessed (for free viewing and downloading of articles) by way of UCSD’s server. This means that it can only be accessed from computers on the UCSD network, including dial-in accounts provided by ACS Office of Network Operations. For instructions about this (i.e., getting access to UCSD subscribed databases using a proxy server) click here .
Other Useful Guides:
The Urban Studies and Planning librarian for UCSD created a useful research guide at: http://sshl.ucsd.edu/collections/uspresearchguide.html
Among other headings, this site provides leads that will help you, “Get an Overview of Your Topic” (Encyclopedias, Dictionaries, and Other Sources for Background Information). Plus it lists many useful San Diego Urban Studies & Planning Websites.Also see the library’s sites called:
Social Science Data Center
UCSD Sage Urban Studies Guide
Other sites you should find useful include:
Google’s new “Google Scholar “
Google Scholar is a free service that helps users search scholarly literature such as peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, preprints, abstracts and technical reports. Just as with Google Web Search, Google Scholar orders your search results by how relevant they are to your query, so the most useful references should appear at the top of the page. This relevance ranking takes into account the full text of each article as well as the article’s author, the publication in which the article appeared and how often it has been cited in scholarly literature. But users beware, this is not a magic bullet. See the comments/cautions at: Google Scholar vs. Real Scholarship
Google Books has almost 200 “full view” books listed under “City Planning.”
http://books.google.com/books?q=subject:%22City+planning.%22&as_brr=1&lr=&sa=N&start=1 There are a number of classics in planning –for instance: “The Execution of City Plans” (1914) – Flavel Shurleff and F.L. Olmsted and “City Development: a study of parks, gardens, and culture-instructions” (1904) Patrick Geddes.