How to find out in accounting and finance

The aim of this guide is to help you find information in Accounting, Banking & Finance. Whether you are looking for information for a project or dissertation, or just looking for some facts, figures, or addresses, this guide should point you in the right direction. The guide is not exhaustive, but the main sources of information are listed, especially those available in Heriot-Watt University Library. Other useful sources on related subjects may be found in the various other How to Find Out guides.

If you would like further advice or assistance, please ask for help at the Enquiry Desk, contact your Subject Librarian, or email the Library's helpdesk.

To find out the latest news and happenings in the library visit the library blog InformS

 

What do you want to know? Keeping up to date
Making a literature search News
Taking and citing references Conferences
Summary of a topic
(Encyclopedias and Dictionaries)
Theses and dissertations
Facts and figures Statistics
Books and eBooks Government publications
Journals Internet Resources
Journal articles Research Centres

 

What do you want to know?

The process of gathering information from published sources is often referred to as making a literature search. It is very tempting to rush into your search for information without planning exactly how you are going to carry out your search. Before you start your search for information, it is worth spending some time defining exactly what you are looking for. Are you looking for a piece of factual information, or do you wish to read a range of viewpoints on your topic? How much knowledge do you already have about the subject? Are you looking for a general introduction to the topic or a detailed discussion of a specific point? Asking yourself these questions can help you to decide what sort of information source is most appropriate for you to search.

 

Making a literature search

There are various ways of searching the literature for information on your topic.  It is worth doing some forward planning to get clear in your mind what you are looking for, and where you are most likely to find it. If you need help at any point in this process, contact your Subject Librarian.  It may be worth taking the following steps:

  • Remember that it takes time and effort to find information.
  • Define your subject and your objectives.
  • Discuss your topic with your supervisor who may be able to suggest various starting points.
  • Look at any information already found as it may lead to further material.
  • Decide which time period should be covered by the search.
  • Decide how comprehensive the search will be. Do you want everything on your subject? In which case go through each of the sections in this leaflet systematically. Or can you exclude some sections and types of material?
  • Look through the introductions to each section in this guide and decide which sources are likely to suit your needs.
  • In each section the more general sources are listed first. If these are not specific enough, look in the more selective sources following. Always read any explanations of how to use a particular source.
  • Think about your search profile - the keywords, subject headings, related terms, etc. - which you can look under in various indexes and lists.
  • Keep good records. Note down the details of each reference as soon as you see it, even if you don't intend to look at it for weeks; also note where you found it so you can check back later. Keep accurate references to everything you read in a consistent format this will form the basis of your bibliography. You will find more details about citing your references in the Taking References section below.

Some useful books available in the library are:

658.007 COL
Business research : a practical guide for undergraduate and postgraduate students / by Jill Collis and Roger Hussey.

658.007 CAM
Business research methods : a practical approach / by Sheila Cameron and Deborah Price.

658.007 SAU
Research methods for business students / by Mark Saunders, Philip Lewis and Adrian Thornhill

001.42
How to find information : a guide for researchers / by Sally Rumsey.

 

You will find many more by searching the Library catalogue

 

Taking and citing references

Note all references in full as you find them, even if you are not sure how useful they might be. Also, keep a note of where you find your references - you may need this if you apply for an inter-library loan.  Keep your references in a database or notebook, or use services such as EndNote.  EndNote is available from the IT department for postgraduate students and staff.  EndNoteWeb (a lite version of the package) is freely available to all members of Heriot Watt, and can be accessed within the Web of Knowledge.  You can register for EndNoteWeb.  Another free citation service is CiteUlike.

Proper referencing is essential to avoid plagiarism.  Plagiarism is the act of taking the ideas, writings or inventions of another person and using these as if they were one's own, whether intentionally or not. Plagiarism occurs where there is no acknowledgement that the writings or ideas belong to or have come from another source.

The University has produced a Student guide to Plagiarism.  This gives a clear definition of plagiarism, examples of how to avoid plagiarism and how to reference the work of others:

Student Guide to Plagiarism
http://www.hw.ac.uk/registry/resources/PlagiarismGuide.pdf

For further details on making references and citations see:

810.61 PEA
PEAR: Cite them right : the essential guide to referencing and plagiarism

Citing and Referencing with the Harvard System
http://www.brad.ac.uk/library/elecinfo/harvard.php

List of style manuals
http://www.dianahacker.com/resdoc/manual.html
This has information on MLA , used in English and the humanities; APA, used in psychology and the social sciences; Chicago, used in history and some humanities; and CSE, used in biology and other sciences.

BRITISH STANDARD BS 1629:1989. Recommendations for references to published materials.

BRITISH STANDARD BS 5605:1990. Recommendations for citing and referencing material.

The Library runs regular  workshops on citing and referencing and using EndNoteWeb.

 

Summary of a topic (Encyclopedias and Dictionaries)

Encyclopaedias and dictionaries are useful for getting a basic outline of a subject, and for finding keywords and subject terms which can be used when searching other sources. These are shelved in the Quick Reference section, at around 332.

Examples include:

Quick Reference
332 CLA
DICTIONARY OF BANKING AND FINANCE TERMS

Quick Reference
332 COL
DICTIONARY OF BANKING AND FINANCE

Quick Reference
657 COL
DICTIONARY OF ACCOUNTING

Quick Reference
658 COL
DICTIONARY OF BUSINESS

Quick Reference
658 LON
LONGMAN BUSINESS ENGLISH DICTIONARY

We also have a large number of specialist dictionaries in the languages taught at Heriot-Watt - French, German, Spanish, Russian and Arabic - plus a small number in other languages. You will find these in the Dictionaries Room on Level 1.

 

Facts and Figures

The following guides may be of help:

 

Books and eBooks

Use the library catalogue to search for books and eBooks on your subject or to find out if we hold the book you need.  A guide to searching the catalogue is available.

You can also use other libraries, information on other libraries, links to their catalogues and access arrangements for Heriot-Watt staff and students are available from the following pages:

Edinburgh Libraries

Libraries outwith Edinburgh

Two very useful catalogues to find books published on a particular topic are:

British Library Integrated Catalogue
The British Library is the UK's national repository library. The BL receives a copy of most books and periodicals published in the United Kingdom.  

COPAC (Consortium of University Research Libraries)
Unified access to the catalogues of over 20 of the largest university research libraries in the UK and Ireland. 

You can also use:

Google Scholar

Search across a broad range of scholarly literature (books, journal articles, theses, preprints) from multiple sources.

Google Book Search

Search the full text of books to find ones that interest you.  Content and limited extracts may be available.

Amazon.co.uk

The UK branch of the well-known Internet bookshop also has a searchable database of books in print.  Other booksellers websites may also be of use.

 

If you find details of a book you wish to read, but it is unavailable at Edinburgh Campus library or Scottish Borders Campus library, you may use the Inter-Library Loans Service and we will borrow a copy for you from another library.
 

 

Journals

Journals are often the first place where new research findings are published and are therefore an extremely important source of information. Journals can be published electronically or in print.  The majority of journals which the Library subscribes to are available electronically, print (hardcopy) journals in accounting, banking and finance are located on level 1 of the library.

 

A list of the print and electronic journals the library subscribes to is available from the A-Z list of journals, or search the Library Catalogue.

 

Access to the full text of articles published in journals is normally only available if you or your University Library has a subscription to the journal.  However some journals are open access journals whose articles may be accessed online by anyone without charge.   A list of these journals is available from:

 

DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals
 Maintained by LUND University Libraries, this service covers free, full text, quality controlled scientific and scholarly journals and aims to cover all subjects and languages. There are 4570+ journals in the directory.

 

You can find out what journals are published on your subject using the following resources:

 

Current serials received
This contains the titles of over 60,000 serials currently received by the British Library's Science, Technology and Business services and its Document Supply Centre, whose serial holdings embrace all subjects, including the humanities and social sciences, and all languages.
 

PubList.com
PubList.com is a directory of information about more than 150,000 publications and more than 8000 newspapers around the world.
 

Jourrnal citation reports
Accessed via: ISI WEB of Knowledge

Journal Citation Reports is a comprehensive and unique resource that allows you to evaluate and compare journals using citation data drawn from over 7,500 scholarly and technical journals from more than 3,300 publishers in over 60 countries. It is the only source of citation data on journals, and includes virtually all areas of science, technology, and social sciences.

 

Journal articles

To find relevant articles published in journals you need to search a database.  A list of databases containing information on articles published in journals in accounting, banking,  finance and related topics are available from the databases page.

 

You can also identify relevant articles published in journals using Search50.  Search50 allows you to cross search some of the accounting, banking and finance databases rather than searching them individually.  Search50 does not offer the sophisticated and flexible searching available through the individual database interfaces, but can be a starting point, if you don’t know where to begin searching for a topic.

 

If the article you need is published in a journal that the Library does not subscribe to, you may be able to consult a print copy at another library, consult Edinburgh Libraries or Libraries outwith Edinburgh for access arrangements to other libraries.  Two very useful services to find out which libraries hold a particular journal are:

 

SALSER.  The Serials Union Catalogue for Scottish academic and research libraries is a free tool to help locate journal titles held in Scotland.

SUNCAT.  The Serials Union Catalogue for the UK research community is a free tool to help locate journal titles held in the UK.

 

You may also use the Inter-Library Loans service if we do not subscribe to the journal the article you require is published in.  You can request either a photocopy or electronic copy of the article using the Inter-Library Loans Service.

 

Information on research papers or articles (and sometimes the full text)  may also be available in open access archives or repositories.  Open Access archives or repositories are digital collections of research articles that have been placed there by their authors. In the case of journal articles this may be done either before (preprints) or after publication (postprints).  More information is available from research articles, preprints and postprints.

 

You can search the contents of open access archives and repositories using the following services:


Repository Search
Search across 103 UK academic eprints repositories.
 

OpenDOAR
OpenDOAR is an authoritative directory of academic open access repositories.  OpenDOAR has a trial search service for the full-text of material held in open access repositories listed in the Directory.

Google
Google and other internet search engines index the material held in open access repositories.

ROS: The Research Output Service
ROS is Heriot-Watt University's institutional repository.

 

Current awareness: Keeping up to date

It is very difficult to read or scan all new publications appearing in any subject area. For those, such as lecturers and postgraduates undertaking research, who need to know on a regular basis what is being published in their areas of interest, most databases allow you to save a search and be alerted via email or an RSS feed when new articles meeting your search criteria are added to the database.


You can also be alerted (by email or RSS feed)  when the  table of contents for particular journal(s) are released using the following services:

ZETOC- British Library's Electronic Table of Contents
Includes an email alerting service (Zetoc Alert), and an RSS feeds service (Zetoc RSS), to enable you to keep up-to-date with relevant new articles and papers.
 

ticTOCs journal tables of contents service
 Find thousands of scholarly journal Table of Contents (TOCs) from multi-publishers, view TOCs, export TOC Feeds to feedreaders, save TOCs for future current awareness.

More information is available from Keeping up-to-date

 

 News

The Library subscribes to a service called Factiva which provides the full text of 2,300+ international newspapers including:

The Financial Times (Searching the Financial Times)
The Wall Street journal
South China Morning post
Le Monde
Les Echos
The Guardian
Handelsblatt
The Daily Telegraph
The Herald
The Independent
The Scotsman
The Times

You can search newspapers separately or search key publications from a specific country.

 

Conferences

Often the first results of new research are reported at conferences. Some conference papers are listed in databases, but for another way to find out if any conference papers have been published on your subject check:

Conference Proceedings
This is included as part of Web of Science, available through the Web of Knowledge
 

 

Theses and dissertations

Print copies of postgraduate theses from Heriot-Watt University are available in the Riccarton Library. Details are included in the Library catalogue and are marked: "Theses collection". If you're looking for a specific thesis, you can search by author or title in the catalogue, but for more detailed information on locating theses, see How to find Heriot-Watt theses in the catalogue.

A printed Index of Heriot-Watt Postgraduate theses is available at the Service Desk. Postgraduate theses are not kept on the open shelves, so if you want to look at them you must request them at the Service Desk. Most theses can only be used in the Library, but if two copies are held, one may be borrowed. In other cases, ask the awarding School for a loan copy.

Electronic copies of postgraduate theses are available through ROS: The Research Output Service, and details are included in the Library catalogue.

 

See our guide on Theses and Dissertations for more information on theses from Scottish Borders Campus Library and theses from other Universities.

 

The library receives a selection of past undergraduate and postgraduate dissertations from some Schools.   Ask at the Library service desk for a list of the dissertations currently available in the library.
 

 

Statistics

Statistics can be difficult to trace. The Library has a large number of business, economic, financial and demographic statistical series in the Statistics Section on Level 2 of the Edinburgh campus. Most are UK, but some are international, and there is a large collection of OECD statistics and reports.  Useful guides to both governmental and non-governmental statistics in the UK include:

Quick Reference
051 GUI (Scottish Borders campus, previous edition at Edinburgh campus)
OFFICE FOR NATIONAL STATISTICS
GUIDE TO OFFICIAL STATISTICS

GUIDE TO OFFICIAL STATISTICS (2000 EDITION)
Details of statistical publications produced by UK Government Statistics Service and other official organisations within the UK. It is divided into sixteen chapters, each focusing on a different subject area. Very detailed subject index. New edition published approximately every 5 years.

UK National Statistics
This site contains the latest comprehensive range of official UK statistics and information about statistics as well providing free access to a selection of recently released publications.

Official Yearbook of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
The latest edition 2005) covers government, international relations, defence, education and training, the labour market, social protection, health, crime and justice, religion, culture, communications and the media, sport, environment, housing, planning and regeneration, transport, the economy, public finance, international trade and investment, science, engineering and technology, agriculture, fishing and forestry, manufacturing and construction, energy and natural resources, and financial services. Information on England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland is included throughout, and in separate introductory chapters.
 

Scottish government- Statistics
Can browse statistics by topic or search by keyword.

Banking & Finance Statistics

Bank of England: Monetary and Financial Statistics

Consists of: money and lending; monetary financial institutions' balance sheets; further analyses of deposits and lending; external business of banks operating in the UK, public sector debt and the money markets; sterling commercial paper, other debt securities, capital issues; financial derivatives, interest and exchange rates and occasional background articles.

Financial Statistics Monthly
Provides key financial and monetary statistics for the UK

For unofficial sources see:

Quick Reference
051 MOR
MORT
SOURCES OF UNOFFICIAL UK STATISTICS
Gives details of statistical publications produced regularly by organisations other than governmental bodies, e.g. trade associations, market research companies etc.
 

Government publications

Government publications, often known as official publications, are produced by governments, government departments, and such bodies as the European Community.   See our guide Government information.
 

 

Internet Resources

The popular Internet search engines, though very useful, don't index everything.  They may not index some of the subscription-based services mentioned in this How To Find Out guide. If you use Google, note the Google Guide.

 

A tutorial which introduces you to key Business and management internet sources and helps you develop your internet skills is:

 

Internet for Business and Management

Internet for Business and Management is a free online tutorial to help university students develop their Internet research skills.

 

A more general tutorial on searching the internet is:

 

The Online Netskills Interactive Course (TONIC)
TONIC is an easy-to-understand, structured course, offering step-by-step, practical guidance on major Internet topics, ranging from basic through to advanced.

You might also find some of our workshops useful.
 

 

Research Centres and projects

Other useful sources for locating current academic research and new technologies are research centres.
Some useful sites are

ESRC Society Today
This Economics and Social Research Council site provides access to early research findings, full texts and original data sets, and enables users to track down researchers in particular fields. Online discussion groups are also available. It includes details of grants, projects, ESRC funded Programmes and Research Centres and other activities and details of research publications and activities which are outputs of the research.

Bristol Centre for Management Accounting Research (BRICMAR), University of the West of England, University of Bristol

The Business, Management and Accountancy Subject Centre of the Higher Education Academy based at Oxford Brookes University.

HBS Working Knowledge
This site features new work from more than 200 staff at Harvard Business school. Includes a heading on finance.

Institute for Fiscal Studies
IFS is a research institute which exists to provide top quality economic analysis independent of government, political party or any other vested interest. Research findings are available free of charge.

Rutgers Accounting Research Centre
This centre aims to further research and creative teaching methods in accounting. Includes working papers and presentations on e-commerce.
 

 

Contact your Subject Librarian

 

Catherine Ure

email: c.m.ure@hw.ac.uk

Telephone: 0131 451 3215