Skip to Main Content

GEOG 414: Data Sources for Climate Change: Home

Information to help you formulate a research question and locate data for your topic.

Formulating a Research Question

Literature Databases

Remember

You may not be able to find exactly what you'd like.  Be prepared to be flexible on one or more of your question elements.

Finding Data - Strategies

  • Define the specific elements of your question:  time, geography and subject matter.
  • Consider what organizations might pay for data collection on your topic.
    • government (international, national, state, local...)
    • trade associations
    • non-profits
    • academe (directly from a researcher or indirectly from a repository)
  • Read the literature for possible sources, but beware that sources noted in articles may not be openly available.
  • Will data be costly in terms of money or time to obtain?  Do you have the requisite knowledge to manipulate it?
  • Cite your data to make them easier for others to find.  (The linked site provides guidelines for how to format data citations.)

Understanding Data

  • Read the technical documentation!
  • Consider the purpose for which data were collected, and their limitations.
    • When was the data collected?  Will it be collected again?
    • Why was the data collected?  Who collected it?
    • Who is included in the data?  Who is not included?  What’s the scale?  
    • What’s the universe?  HH, people, families, people under 5, etc?
    • Understand the specifics of what you’re looking at (can be tricky with scientific datasets)
    • Are you looking at raw numbers or rates?  This is important!
    • How is the data represented (format)?  Nominal, Ordinal, Interval, Ratio?  Human vs. Machine readable?  Important for analysis
    • Can you transform the data or make it work with your other data?
    • Do you believe what you’re seeing?  Does it pass the smell test?
  • Ask the experts (both about finding and understanding data).

Variety of Possible Spatial Data Sources

Other Sources (NOT necessarily spatial)

Michele Hayslett

Profile Photo
Michele Hayslett
My pronouns are she, her, hers.
Contact:
Subjects
Data Management
Numeric Data
Census Data
Locating Data

If you would like to request we acquire data, please carefully read the guidelines at http://library.unc.edu/data/purchase/.

Website
Social: YouTube Page