Use the search words, library databases, and selected sources below to support your analysis of the following film.
Consider the following themes from the film "Where to Invade Next":
How? Click on the library databases below and type Broad Search Words relating to your topic, such as: mass incarceration
Click on the next tab above ("Then find books, videos, articles") to dig deeper and focus your search.
You can also use Google Scholar or Google Books to find sources:
If you can't find the full text of an article or book (through library databases or through Google Scholar or on the web), you can request it through Interlibrary Loan. Through this service, you can usually get copies of articles in 3-4 business days and books in 8-10 days.
CLICK:
(Click below to enlarge image)
Examples
Use the Evaluation Criteria Below to Evaluate the Quality of Your Source.
Log in or create your free student account with NoodleTools using the link below and easily create and store citations.
Vide the video and information below to learn more about why citing is so important!
To find video segments in the "Contents" area: Click the carrot or the arrow at the bottom of the video player
Example:
(click to enlarge image)
View the video below to learn more about how the librarians can help you
Contact us:
In Person
Find a librarian on staff at the information desk during the library's open hours. This is the best way to contact us if you are on campus, need immediate assistance or have a lengthy or complicated question.
By Chat / Instant Message
Chat with a librarian through the library's chat /instant messaging service. We participate in a program where librarians from all over the country can answer questions, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week!
By Email
Email a reference librarian with a reference question at librarian@greenriver.edu. This is an alternative to chat IM if you want help from a Green River Community College librarian. Emails will be answered Monday through Friday during normal business hours.
(click on image to enlarge)
What Work? What Life? What Balance? Critical Reflections on the Work-Life Balance Debate
The articulation of work and life, cast as work-life balance, has become a key feature of much current government, practitioner and academic debate. The main message of this debate is the need for good work-life balance. However, the debate and subsequent policy are too often based on assumptions about work and life derived from blunt readings of empirical data or misconceptions about employee attitudes to work and life. What is required therefore is analysis that explores the back-story to work-life balance debate as well as the operation of work-life balance policies. Compiling critical reflections on many aspects of the work-life balance
Guide to U.S. Health and Health Care Policy
Through 30 topical, operational, and relational essays, the book addresses the development of the U.S. health care system and policies, the federal agencies and public and private organizations that frame and administer those policies, and the challenges of balancing the nation’s health care needs with the rising costs of medical research, cost-effective treatment, and adequate health insurance.
Affluenza: How overconsumption is killing us -- and how we can fight back
by
Teaching Sex: The Shaping of Adolescence in the 20th Century
by
World Education Encyclopedia
by