Monday, March 18, 2019

Week Nine Assignment


Week Nine Assignment

I. Citations:

1.     Allardt, E. 1993. “Having, Loving, Being: An Alternative to the Swedish Model of Welfare Research.” In Martha Nussbaum and Amartya Sen, eds., The Quality of Life, 88-94. Clarendon Press, Oxford.
o   This is an ebook
o   I looked in Search It 
o  Full text available at: Oxford University Press Ebooks (Orbis Cascade Alliance,) and through ILLiad.

2.     Beck, Ulrich. 1992. Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity. Sage, London.
o   This is a print book
o   I looked in Search It
o   Availability and request options: Holland and Terrell Libraries, Tri-Cities Library. Also, available through summit libraries: Eastern Washington University, University of Washington, Portland State University, University of Puget Sound, Eastern Oregon University, Whitman College, Lewis & Clark, Willamette College.
3.     Dake, Karl. 1991. “Orienting Dispositions in the Perception of Risk: An Analysis of Contemporary World Views and Cultural Biases.” Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology 22 (1): 60-81.
o   This is an article for the Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology.
o   I looked in Search It. Searching by the name of journal.
o   Available through Vancouver Library, Holland and Terrell Libraries, and through summit libraries.
4.     Fischhoff, B. 1990. “Psychology and Public Policy: Tool or Toolmaker? American Psychologist 45: 647-653.
o   This is an article for the journal of American Psychologist
o   I looked in Search It. Searching by the name of the journal.
o   Available through ILLiad, through summit libraries, and through Holland and Terrell Libraries.



II.  Two different types of sources:

Article: Self-Serving Bias in Tax Perceptions: Federalism as a Source of Political Instability. Authors: Heyndels, B., & Ashworth, J. (2003
Heyndels, B., & Ashworth, J. (2003). Self-serving bias in tax perceptions: Federalism as a source of political instability. Kyklos, 56(1), 47-68. Retrieved from https://intserver1.wsulibs.wsu.edu:2100/docview/60586187?accounid=14902

           List of references:
·      Aldrich, J. H. and F. D. Nelson (1984). Linear Probability, Logit and Probit Models. Quantitative Applications in Social Sciences, 45. Beverley Hills: Sage.
o   This is a print book
o   Looked for it in Search It
o   Available by request through Holland and Terrell Libraries, Spokane Academic Library and summit libraries.
·       Ashworth, J. and B. Heyndels (2000a). Politicians’ Opinions on Tax Reform, Public Choice. 103: 117–138.
o    This is an article for the Journal Public Choice
o   Looked in Search It
o   Available through full text or print issue at JSTOR Business II Collection, Springer Link Journals, EBSCOhost Business Source Complete, OCLC FirstSearch ECO Pullman, and through ILLiad

III. Reflection:

I found this week’s assignment a little complicated, maybe because of the Spring break feeling still. Even though I was able to complete it, I am still not sure if I did it right. I quite understand what to do but I was not sure about how to search for journal’s articles. Is always good to explore so I did the best I could on these activities.




1 comment:

  1. Good work. Just wanted to clarify that although you are correct that the first item is available as an eBook, if someone wanted the print version they could request it from a the Holland & Terrell library in Pullman or from 17 Summit libraries, so I wouldn't recommend anyone requesting it through Interlibrary Loan (ILLiad) -- as you have pointed out for the second item. Item 3 is available in print in the WSU-Vancouver library and also online through Sage Complete, but not through the Summit request system. The fourth item is available online through ProQuest PsychArticles, so there is no need to request it from H&T, Summit or ILLiad. It appears you understood the lesson and assignment enough have success in finding the two resources from the reference list of your article.

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