Use Cases

PhD Students: Preserving Web Sources for Literature Reviews and Chapters

Grey literature, blogs, and agency PDFs vanish. A practical approach to clipping and organizing web sources alongside your reference manager.

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PageStash Team
March 28, 2026
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PhD Students: Preserving Web Sources for Literature Reviews and Chapters

Doctoral work draws on journals and grey literature: agency reports, working papers on the web, practitioner blogs, and datasets described on project sites. Those URLs are high-churn.

What Zotero (etc.) does vs what it misses

Reference managers excel at citable metadata for stable publications. They are weaker when:

  • The “publication” is a web page that may move
  • You need the exact wording of a policy paragraph six months later
  • You want to search across informal sources like you search PDFs

Add a web archive layer

  1. When a web source influences a claim, clip the page.
  2. Keep your PDFs in Zotero and your web captures in PageStash—linked by habit (paste URL in notes, or consistent naming).
  3. Use full-text search to recover quotes when drafting.

Ethics reminder

Clip what you have lawful access to. Archiving is for your research workspace, not for redistributing paywalled content.

Try PageStash for web sources →

TOPICS

PhD
academic-research
literature-review
web-archiving
students

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