So recently several individuals have asked about obtaining articles they do not have access to that I cite in my blog posts. (Here or on the American Society of Evidence Based Policing.) This is perfectly fine, but I want to share a few tricks I have learned on accessing paywalled newspaper articles and journal articles over the years.
I currently only pay for a physical Sunday newspaper for the Raleigh News & Observer (and get the online content for free because of that). Besides that I have never paid for a newspaper article or a journal article.
Newspaper paywalls
Two techniques for dealing with newspaper paywalls. 1) Some newspapers you get a free number of articles per month. To skirt this, you can open up the article in a private/incognito window on your preferred browser (or open up the article in another browser entirely, e.g. you use Chrome most of the time, but have Firefox just for this on occasion.)
If that does not work, and you have the exact address, you can check the WayBack machine. For example, here is a search for a WaPo article I linked to in last post. This works for very recent articles, so if you can stand being a few days behind, it is often listed on the WayBack machine.
Journal paywalls
Single piece of advice here, use Google Scholar. Here for example is searching for the first Braga POP Criminology article in the last post. Google scholar will tell you if a free pre or post-print URL exists somewhere. See the PDF link on the right here. (You can click around to “All 8 Versions” below the article as well, and that will sometimes lead to other open links as well.)
Quite a few papers have PDFs available, and don’t worry if it is a pre-print, they rarely substance when going into print.1
For my personal papers, I have a google spreadsheet that lists all of the pre-print URLs (as well as the replication materials for those publications).
If those do not work, you can see if your local library has access to the journal, but that is not as likely. And I still have a Uni affiliation that I can use for this (the library and getting some software cheap are the main benefits!). But if you are at that point and need access to a paper I cite, feel free to email and ask for a copy (it is not that much work).
Most academics are happy to know you want to read their work, and so it is nice to be asked to forward a copy of their paper. So feel free to email other academics as well to ask for copies (and slip in a note for them to post their post-prints to let more people have access).
The Criminal Justician and ASEBP
If you like my blog topics, please consider joining the American Society of Evidence Based Policing. To be clear I do not get paid for referrals, I just think it is a worthwhile organization doing good work. I have started a blog series (that you need a membership for to read), and post once a month. The current articles I have written are:
- I think scoop and run is a good idea
- Keeping your options open is typically better than restricting them. Police should have the option to take gun shot wound victims directly to the emergency room when appropriate.
- We don’t know what causes widespread crime trends
- While we can identify whether crime is rising or falling, retrospectively identifying what caused those ups and downs is much more difficult.
- Evidence Based Oversight on Police Use of Force
- Collecting data in conjunction with clear administrative policies has strong evidence it overall reduces officer use of force.
- Violent crime interventions that are worth it
- Two well-vetted methods – hot spots policing and focused deterrence – are worth the cost for police to implement to reduce violent crime.
- Denver’s STAR Program and Disorder Crime Reductions
- Assessing whether Denver’s STAR alternative mental health responders can be expected to decrease a large number of low-level disorder crimes.
So if you want to read more of my work on criminal justice topics, please join the ASEBP. And it is of course a good networking resource and training center you should be interested in as well.
- You can also sign up for email alerts on Google Scholar for papers if you find yourself reading a particular author quite often.↩︎