 Next, we're going to look at sources for issues. We're going to go through four sources, Business Source Complete, Nexus Uni, Newspapers, and eventually Philosophy. Business Source Complete is explained in a previous video, so take a look at it and throw in an example about Tesla. Now let's look at Nexus Uni. Go to BC Libraries, Databases, Nexus Uni. Create for law review articles. Type in, quote, Autonomous Vehicles, end quote. See how many hits you have, thousand is way too many. You want to get to like 50 or 100. So we can do that by limiting by time. May as well go post 2020, since we understand COVID has changed everything. Also start thinking about keywords, Autonomous Vehicles, Driverless Cars, etc. You can also narrow by Institution, like Boston College, or by Journal, like Harvard Law Review, by searching within the results. It's important to use quotation marks if you want to use an exact phrase like Autonomous Vehicles. In this case, we'll search for Tesla. It's up to your own informed literacy to be critical about various points of view and the spectrum of opinion across your topic. Next we'll look at Newspapers. Go to BC Libraries, Guides, General Guides, and then Newspapers. Newspapers are great because you can spark an idea with scanning and sensing from the news. You can stay up to date and you don't need to read everything every day, just have it set in alert for your topic and you can stay very current with it. A wonderful feature here at BC is we have free access to several great newspapers like The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and The Financial Times. Follow all the instructions to get your own log on to these services and be sure to use the VPN if you're off campus. And please don't share your passwords, this isn't Hulu or Netflix. Now we'll take a look at the next video to learn about philosophical sources with my colleague Chris Strauber.