Roark and Young's "Formulas of Stress and Strain" has a good section on latticed beams, covering both the global and local buckling issues. Bruhn has a good section for calculating the properties of composite(meaning built up of several metal sections) beams, as does "Advanced Mechanics of Materials" by Seely and Smith. Roark shows that since latticed beams have many joints that each have a small amount of give, a latticed column is not as stiff as one would expect, so a correction factor needs to be applied. Since JStephen asked specifically about crane booms and antenna towers, some of which are 2000' tall, and not relatively short transmission towers which are usually almost as wide as they are tall(at least the ones I have seen), global buckling is very much a major issue, as Roark details. Any tower needs global buckling analysis, even if it is a simple determination of whether or not the tower is tall enough to require global buckling analysis. Any paper stating that global buckling analysis is not required for certain structures, needs to give guidelines for when ignoring global buckling is OK, and when it is not.