Use OneSearch if you have a topic.
No topic? If you don't have a topic,
browse some of the peer-reviewed high impact Criminology journals found on the first page of this guide.
OneSearchOneSearch is a multidisciplinary library database that can be limited to peer-reviewed journal articles.
First type in your topic.
Then after searching - limit your results to the option "Peer-reviewed Journals".
Once you generate a list of articles from "Peer-reviewed Journals"
- Check to be sure your article comes from a Criminology journal - i.e., check to see if the name of the journal can be found in the list of Criminology journals found in this guide (a list of highly-regarded Criminology journals generated by Journal Citation Reports).
You will find the name of the journal in front of the publication year, volume number, and page numbers in a OneSearch result (a result that has the heading "ARTICLE").
In the following example the name of the journal is The Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency which appears just before the title of the article and place of publication information. Note the icon indicating that this is a peer-reviewed journal.
- If the journal is a Criminology journal then open the article to see if it is a study. In most cases a study (research article) will contain a Results section and a Discussion section.
The plus and minus of using OneSearch to locate peer-reviewed studies.
- PLUS: Access to recently published Criminology studies.
- PLUS: Limit to peer-reviewed journals.
- PLUS: Focus your search using either the Title or Subject options.
- MINUS: Must check to see if the article comes from a Criminology journal (and not a journal from a different discipline - e.g., political science). Check on the List of Criminology Journals option in this guide (list generated by Journal Citation Reports).
- MINUS: Must review the article to be sure it is a “study” (i.e., research or empirical study). Note - many quantitative studies will have sections labeled. Method/Methods/Methodology and Results and Discussion - however, many qualitative studies may use different terminology.