Honors Colloquium: Resources
Library Resources
- Opposing Viewpoints (Gale In Context) This link opens in a new windowComplete one-stop source for information on social issues. More InfoFull-Text UB ONLY
- Buffalo News Collection This link opens in a new windowFull-text searchable access to the Buffalo News from 1880 to the present day.More InfoFull-Text UB ONLY
- Census DataUB Libraries Research Guide. Access Buffalo/Niagara census data, NYS resources, and contact information for our Social Sciences librarian.
- 2020 Census Data MapA web mapping application intended to provide users with a simple interface to view, save and print county-based demographic maps of the United States.
Web Resources
- Partnership for the Public GoodPartnership for the Public Good is a community-based think tank that builds a more just, sustainable, and culturally vibrant Buffalo Niagara through action-oriented research, policy development, and citizen engagement.
- #BuffaloSyllabusIn response to the mass shooting in Buffalo, the Black Buffalo Syllabus Collective compiled a list of articles, books, op-eds, policy reports, poems, and media on different themes to contextualize the social, economic, and political climate of Buffalo today. This list makes up the #BuffaloSyllabus, which the collective saw as an opportunity to center the experiences of Black people in Western New York. The intended audience of this list is Buffalo’s Black community, local educators, politicians, communities of color allies, organizers, and anyone else interested in learning more about that “Rust Belt Resilience.”
- Open Data BuffaloOpen Data Buffalo is a commitment to proactively release high-quality, updated "publishable City data" through a centralized portal in machine-readable formats, fully accessible and freely available in the public domain. Open Data Buffalo is an official City program designed to foster transparency, innovation, accountability, and efficiency
- Mapping Inequality: Redlining in New Deal AmericaMapping Inequality is a digital humanities project that allows users to explore the history of redlining in the United States through an aggregation of records from the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). It uses the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation’s records, dating between 1935 and 1940, to create an interactive map that reveals the ways city neighborhoods were rated according to their perceived desirability and risk levels for granting home loans.