Table of Contents
| The APLIC-International
Communicatoris published several times yearly by the
Association for Population and Family Planning Libraries and
Information Centers, International.
Mailing address: c/o Family Health International Library, P.O. Box
13950, RTP, NC 27709 USA. ISSN 09-9847
|
With this issue, the APLIC-International Communicator makes its
debut as an online publication. While the Fall 95 issue also appears
online, it originally was a print issue that became electronic. The
current issue was produced and compiled electronically and will become
print for those who so desire. APLIC-International members chose to
convert to an electronic format to facilitate wider distribution. We hope
that this online availability will give our organization more exposure
worldwide. This transition represents one of the many initiatives taken by
APLIC-International to increase its visibility.
Earlier this year, the APLIC-I electronic mailing list generated much
discussion on the role of APLIC-I, its accomplishments, mission, and
future. Ruth Sander compiled a list of APLIC-I activities, which included
those below.
- DUPS, APLIC Duplicate Book Distribution program. Run by Neil
Zimmerman out of the Population Council Library. Very successful and
useful, especially to member libraries in developing countries.
- Census Holdings List. Announces new acquisitions of
international census items in both APLIC member and some non-member
libraries. Run by Gera Draaijer, Univ of Texas-Austin PRC with credit
to APLIC.
- APLIC distribution list. Moderated, for members, but will
post messages from non-members if relevant. Run by Ruth Sandor, Univ
of Wisc-Madison, CDE Info Services.
- Union List. Edited and mounted on Internet at Penn State Univ
PRI by Info Unit; funding found from APC by Edith Ericson; credit to
APLIC, with lots of cooperation from members listing holdings.
- Population and Related Organizations: International Address List.
Published under APLIC auspices, compiled by Ruth Sandor and student at
Univ of Wisc-Madison, CDE Info Services, with no outside funding.
Continuing as electronic file.
- POPIN North
American liaison requested of APLIC by UN POPIN Coordinator.
Possibility of various information networking initiatives under this
sponsorship, but members must design proposals.
- APLIC-I information on the World Wide Web
from the University of Pennsylvania and UN POPIN; U Penn site
maintained by APLIC-I member Lisa Newman and UN POPIN site maintained
by APLIC-I memberSusan Pasquariella.
Abigail Hourwich added to the discussion that many of the ideas that have
been generated by APLIC-I members have been realized. She noted
specifically two new aspects of the last APLIC-I conference. APLIC-I
hosted an information professional from the University of Costa Rica
Population Center and also spondored an Internet Room as a service to
APLIC-I members and attendees of the PAA conference.
APLIC-I intends to continue serving the professional development needs
of family planning and population information professionals worldwide.
This electronic newsletter is just one of the many services provided to
and by APLIC-International members.
Lisa Croucher
Email: croul@med.unc.edu
Hello everyone. Well, Summer has come and gone since we gathered last
May in New Orleans and now Fall and football season are upon us (Did I
hear someone say, "Go Noles!!!"). I trust that everyone one
returned home from Louisiana safely, although if you ate like I did while
you were there you returned home a few pounds heavier. By the way, did
anyone try any of the recipes from your conference packets?
We, your Board of Directors, are presently preparing to get together
here in Tallahassee, Florida, for two days (October 10-11, 1996) to get
plans implimented for next year's conference, which will be held March
25-27, 1997 in Washington, DC. We will be discussing plans for the
conference, doing an Internet room once again (an expanded version of last
year's VERY successful room), and the possibility of a return of the video
festival; in your own room via the "house TV system" if the
logistics can be worked out. From what I've heard from Jean Sack thus far,
I think I can safely predict that we will be in for a very informative
conference next year.
Additionally, we will be discussing a new logo for APLIC. Lisa Newman
has been working with a designer and will be bringing some ideas with her
for us to look at.
I sincerely hope that everyone is making plans to attend what will be
our 30th Annual APLIC-International Conference next March in the capitol
city, Washington, DC. What with the census bureau, the various museums,
landmarks, and national monuments this is a terrific opportunity and a
fantastic city to spend some time visiting. I know that Jean, Libby,
Maryann, and Peggy are working hard to make this a memorable conference;
so come one, come all, let's reward all their effort with a record
attendance.
See you in DC next March.
Robert McCann
Florida State University
Population Center
Email: rmccann@coss.fsu.edu
Advocates for Youth
1025 Vermont Avenue NW, Suite 200
Washington, DC 20005
202-347-5700 (phone)
Hours: by appointment
Director: Marge Clark
Librarian: Sue Alford
Advocates for Youth works in the field of adolescent sexuality, drug
abuse, adolescent pregnancy, parent-child communication and other issues
related to adolescent health both nationally and internationally. In
addition to conducting research, Advocates also publishes a newsletter,
Options, and an excellent series of fact sheets on issues related to
adolescent health: adolescent sexuality and the media, adolescents and
HIV/AIDS, teenage pregnancy in Africa and adolescent childbearing and
educational attainment. They also publish materials for developing
school-based reproductive health services.
The library contains a collection of reference materials for AFY staff
and visitors. The public may use the library by appointment but no public
borrowing is permitted. Telephone reference questions are accepted on
topics relevant to the mission of AFY. The library has a small collection
of books, current periodicals and videos. Its most impressive resource,
however, is an in-house database of 8000+ journal articles on issues
related to adolescents. Each citation includes an extensive abstract and
subject descriptors in addition to standard bibliographic information. The
librarian has developed a thesaurus of terms which are used with the
database. In addition to this specialized database, there is also an
online catalog of materials in the collection. AFY staff can browse all
databases from their offices and one terminal is available for use in the
library. (Cataloging: OCLC; OPAC: Inmagic.)
In addition to her job as full-time librarian, Sue Alford is also
editor of the AFY newsletter and author of a number of the factsheets. If
you have a question on adolescent reproductive health in the United States
or worldwide, you should consider contacting Advocates for Youth.
Currently there is no internet access to the collection.
Peggy D'Adamo
Librarian
Johns Hopkins Center for Communication
Programs
Email: mmc@jhuccp.org
New 1997 members (as of 10/96)
Elizabeth Behrendt
World Resources Institute Library
1709 New York Ave., NW
Washington, DC 20006
Sarah Kolda
Princeton University
Office of Population Research
21 Prospect Ave.
Princeton, NJ 08544
Andrei Rogers
Professor
Population Program
University of Colorado-Boulder
Individual member
Matthew Smith
The Future's Group International
80 Glastonbury, CT 06033
Student member
New members in 1996
- Gerry Boudreau, Louisiana Population Data Center
- Sandy Crump, Population Studies Center, University of Michigan
- Elph Morgan, PSC, University of Michigan
- Cindy Livingston, PSC, University of Michigan
- Development Group, IRH/DGI
- Hannah Doress, Harvard Center for Population Studies
- Beth Fredrick, Alan Guttmacher Institute
- Margaret Harter, The Kinsey Institute, Bloomington, Indiana
- Nancy Minter, Urban Institute Library
- Greta Ober-Beauchesne, Institute for Reproductive Health,
Georgetown University Medical Center
- Sociology Information Centre, University of Alberta, Department of
Sociology
- Jennifer Warren, CDE University of Wisconsin-Madison (part of CDE
sustaining membership)
- Charlene Yauch, CDE University of Wisconsin-Madison, Data Library
(part of the CDE sustaining membership)
- Katherine Willson, The Future's Group International, Glastonbury,
CT
We have 60 individual members and 8 sustaining members (consisting of
26 people) from the United States. There is one individual member from
Africa, 7 from Asia and the Pacific, 5 from Europe, 5 from Latin America,
2 from Canada and 1 from the Caribbean. Membership total is 107 for 1996.
Lisa Newman
APLIC Membership Chair
Librarian
Population Studies Center
University of Pennsylvania
Two print publications of interest to APLIC-I members recently have been
published. The Alan Guttmacher Institute has just come out with a new
publication on contraception after sex called Readings on
Emergency Contraception from Family Planning Perspectives and International
Family Planning Perspectives 1992-1996 and the INTRAH Program has
released its seventh edition of the List of Free Materials in
Reproductive Health
Readings on Emergency Contraception addresses
contraception which is used to prevent pregnancy after unprotected
intercourse. Emergency ccontraception has long been the subject of
discussion by those committed to reducing unintended pregnancy. The 64-page
volume from the Alan Guttmacher Institute brings together five years of
extensive research and analysis, from the pages of The Alan Guttmacher
Institute's peer-reviewed journals, Family Planning Perspectives and International
Family Planning Perspectives. Covering the history of emergency
contraception, the effectiveness of different regimens, the international
experience and the method's potential impact on unintended pregnancy, the
publication compiles the latest findings and analysis from leading
researchers.
To purchase one copy of Readings On Emergency Contraception send a
check of $15.00 plus $1.50 for shipping and handling made out to The Alan
Guttmacher Institute. The publication also may be purchased with a VISA or
MasterCard. All orders must be prepaid. Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery.
The Alan Guttmacher Institute
120 Wall Street
New York, N.Y. 10005
Tel: 212-248-1111
Fax: 212-248-1951
Email: info@agi-usa.org
List of Free Materials in Reproductive Health
This is the seventh edition of INTRAH's annotated bibliography of materials
available free to individuals and organizations in developing countries. The
bibliography is organized into the following sections: overview of
reproductive health; family planning; maternal and newborn health;
reproduction and sexuality; STDs/RTIs/HIV/AIDS; family and community health;
gender; population and the environment; economic and community development;
and catalogs and references. Postal addresses, e-mail addresses, telephone
numbers and fax numbers are provided for obtaining the materials included in
the List (materials are not available from INTRAH). French and
Spanish editions also are available. An online, searchable version will be
available via INTRAH's World Wide Web site. A limited supply of the print
publication is available free to health and development organizations in
developing countries. Others may contact INTRAH for ordering information.
The INTRAH Program
208 North Columbia St., CB #8100
Chapel Hill NC 27514 USA
Phone: 919-966-5636
Fax: 919-966-6816
CIESIN (Consortium for International Earth Science Information
Network)
http://www.ciesin.org
ciesin.info@ciesin.org
CIESIN provides access to data sets of interest to population researchers.
They include Global Population, Social Indicators of Development, Trends
in Developing Economics, World Resources, and World Tables. A new and more
user-friendly web interface also makes it easier to search the databases
or you can download a sophisticated (but difficult to use) search
interface. CIESIN also provides access to interactive applications like
DDCarto, DDViewer, and Ulysses (tm) Cross-tabulation Engine, if you are
interested in US Census data. Finally, CIESIN has developed excellent
thematic guides to key environmental issues, including human health.
Demography and Population Studies: WWW Virtual Library"
http://coombs.anu.edu.au/ResFacilities/DemographyPage.html
Diana.Crow@anu.edu.au
This site keeps track of Internet-based information sources of value to
researchers in the field of demography. It currently has links to 155
demographic information sources worldwide. It has a complete list of
demography and population www servers, WAIS databases, gopher servers and
non-demography resources of interest. Definitely a good place to begin a
search.
DEVLINE
http://www.ids.ac.uk/
d.beer@sussex.ac.uk
Devline (Development Information Online) is hosted by the Institute of
Development Studies (IDS) and the British Library for Development Studies
(BLDS). Devline includes online access to the BLDS catalogue and journal
articles, bibiographies on development issues, information about IDS
research, teaching, publishing. The database access is currently via
telnet, but a web interface is planned for this year.
Epidemiology WWW Virtual Library
http://chanane.ucsf.edu/epidem/epidem.html
webmaster@www.epibiostat.ucsf.edu
This comprehensive guide to epidemiology resources on the internet
includes links to government agencies and international organizations, as
well as links to resources organized by subjects such as "infectious
diseases and AIDS," "Social and Behavioral" and
"Nutrition". It also includes an extensive list of newsgroups,
online publications, job announcements, meeting & conferences.
International Development Research Centre (IDRC)
http://www.idrc.ca/
pub@idrc.ca
In addition to its other online resources, IDRC provides online access
to its library. You can search databases related to international
development including IDRC's own library catalog (searchable via telnet
from the web site). The web site also includes information on IDRC
publications & videos. The library covers international development,
food and nutrition, gender, social policy, sustainable development and
other related issues.
POPIN
http://www.undp.org/popin/popin.htm
popin@undp.org
Produced by the UN Population Division, POPIN is a decentralized
network for the coordination of regional, national and non-governmental
population information activities. There are regional POPIN networks in
Africa, Asia, and Latin America. POPIN provides comprehensive access to
population information produced in all regions and on various
population-related issues. It includes information on upcoming
conferences, documentation for the ICPD and Beijing conferences, an
electronic library of population information resources, information on
regional POPIN networks and the most extensive on-line collection of full
text journals in the field.
Population Index
http://popindex.princeton.edu/
popindex@princeton.edu
The entire published database for 1986-1996 is available on-line and
can be searched by author, subject matter, geographical region, and year
of publication. Population Index has also added a free-text search
capacity to its web pages. It is available on an experimental basis for
all issues from 1994 to 1996, so give it try and let the Population Index
staff know what you think.
US Census Bureau
http://www.census.gov
webmaster@census.gov
Includes demographic information on the US and other countries.
Information can be accessed through an A-Z subject list or you can search
by word or by place. The site also has interactive software which allows
you to create your own extract file from the 1990 census or generate maps
on the fly. Also includes a world and US population clock and information
on the latest economic indicators for the US economy.
Virtual Library on International Development
www.synapse.net/~acdi03/indexg/welcome.htm
marc_lepage@acdi-cida.gc.ca
Links to resources in international development very nicely organized
by themes including population and planning, nutrition, health and women
& development. This site is also available in French. It contains a
clickable map of the world to access links for each region. Resources are
also listed organizationally.
World Bank
www.worldbank.org
comments@www.worldbank.org
The Bank's web site includes information on current events, research,
sectoral information, country and project information. You can search
project summaries by subject, country or sector. The extensive list of
publications includes extensive summaries of some Bank publications. The
site also provides access to research reports, datasets and
bibliographies. Although the structure is sometimes difficult to navigate,
the Bank has extensive online resources.
World Health Organization (WHO)
http://www.who.ch
webmaster@who.ch
WHO's web site provides access a vareity of WHO resources. There is a
keyword search feature, information on WHO global programs, access to
WHOSIS, a bibliographic database of WHO publications, including
unpublished documents. WHODOC is a bimonthly update to WHOSIS, available
via ftp. Also provides access to epidemiological and statistical databases
and sources of health information which can be downloaded and loaded
locally.
Peggy D'Adamo
Librarian
Johns Hopkins Center for Communication
Programs
Email: mmc@jhu.edu
The Training Materials Database (TMDB), which many APLIC members have
used as a reference source for training materials in reproductive health,
is now available as a part of the POPLINE database. To reflect the change
in format and location, the name has been changed to the Reproductive
Health Training Materials Collection (RHTMC).
In 1995, members of the Reproductive Health Materials Working Group of
the cooperating agencies of USAID's Population, Health and Nutrition
Center concurred that the format of the database and the procedure for
contributing materials to it had become outdated since the database's
creation in 1989.
The INTRAH Program coordinated with Victoria Kimm, POPLINE Acquisitions
Manager, to design a proposal for the transfer of the database and the
redesign of the contribution procedure. A questionnaire was sent to the
twenty organizations who were contributors to the Training Materials
Database to solicit their opinions on or questions about the proposal. All
fifteen respondents enthusiastically supported the proposal to incorporate
the database into POPLINE.
At the May 22, 1996 meeting of the Reproductive Health Materials
Working Group, member organizations received print-outs of their
organization's entries in the Training Materials Database. Items which
also existed in POPLINE were tagged as such. Contributors were instructed
to review the TMDB entry and approve or edit for POPLINE. Also at this
meeting, the procedures for contributing to and accessing the database
were finalized.
The form for contributing materials to the RHTMC is available online.
Although contributors will receive yearly reminders to submit materials to
the RHTMC, POPLINE is continually updating its database, so contributors
are encouraged to submit materials as they become available. The RHTMC may
be accessed in POPLINE by conducting a text word search on "RH
Training Materials."
Contributors to the RHTMC hope that this new arrangement will
facilitate access to the materials in the RHTMC by family planning and
reproductive health organizations worldwide.
Lisa Croucher
Librarian
INTRAH Program
School of Medicine
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
At a times when everyone is scrambling to develop a presence on the
World Wide Web, Population Index is among the few information
services that has achieved this objective largely by accident, and I would
like to tell you how this occurred.
The editors of the Population Index have been adopting the new
computer technologies that have been developed over the past three decades
in a fairly conservative fashion: that is, by not attempting to use new
technological breakthroughs until they had become tried and tested, and
above all, affordable. The author and geographical indexes were
computerized in the early 1970s; the bibliographic records computerized
using mainframe computers in the early 1980s; and the current items, or
original articles produced using personal computers in the early 1990s.
But although we have had the conversion from mainframe computers to
desktop publishing for the whole journal as an objective for some time, it
was not until 1993 that we decided that the time was ripe to make such a
change.
The most difficult decision to make was whether to go to an outside
contractor to undertake this conversion for us, or to use internal
resources and try and do the job in-house. Although there are good
arguments for going either way, we decided to go the in-house route for
two main reasons. First, the Head of OPR's Computing Core volunteered to
develop the PC-based system we would need, and, second, we decided that,
as the maintenance and future development of the sustem was as important
as its original design, this could be performed better in-house than
through hiring an outside contractor.
The system that Germán Rodgríguez developed for us was finally
demonstrated to us in early 1995, and we have been using it to publish the
journal since the last issue for that year. However, during the course of
that initial demonstration, the system's designer also showed how it could
be used to make Population Index available on the Internet, which
we had had as a more long-term objective. The value of making it available
to a new and wider audience in this way was immediately obvious, so we
have since concentrated much of our limited resources to expanding and
developing our Web presence.
The first step was to put two years of the Index in a
browse-only version,so that all the citations for 1993 and 1994 were
available on the Web in just the same format as exists in the hard-copy
version of the journal. This we demonstrated at PAA in 1995, together with
limited author indexing. Since then Germán has developed the system
considerably and it is now available in both browse and searchable modes,
and the whole bibliography from 1986 to 1995 can be serached by author,
year of publication, keyword, and country. Work is already underway to
make free-text searching available for the whole database, and this is
already available for the last two year's records.
What comes next? We have signed an agreement with the Mellon Foundation
to make all of the Population Index from its beginnings in the
early 1930s to 1985 available through the JSTOR Project. We plan to
continue to offer our Web service free of charge as long as we can,
providing those who fund us continue to give us the means to do so. We
will also continue to publish the hard copy journal Population Index
as long as the demand for it exists, and, again, as long as our funding,
which includes paid subscriptions to the journal, continues at a level to
permit us to do this. Likewise, we will also contribute our bibliographic
records for inclusion in POPLINE as long as USAID funding for this
continues.
We plan to develop and update our Web presence over the next few years.
The main problem, as I see it, is likely to be one that many information
providers are or will be facing in the coming years, and that is: who pays
for what. Preparing the bibliographic records that end up in the journal,
on the Web, in POPLINE, or wherever, costs money. Internet users want
their information free of charge, and we are happy to give it to them,
providing we can find the financial support from other sources than users
to enable us to do so. But should the user be expected to contribute
anything for the information that he or she presumably is finding useful?
And how does a non-profit service such as Population Index fit in
with many commercial vendors who could equally well provide this
information to users? The answers to such questions will concern many of
us over the coming years.
By Richard Hankinson
Editor
Population Index
Office of Population Research
Princeton University
kyrle@opr.princeton.edu
In my summer quest to answer the above for librarians at three
different University Libraries, I've concluded that this list will always
be in an emerging state -- and therefore should be annotated and revised
regularly for more users on an APLIC WEB site. We will put out the
challenge: who will spend the initial time to succinctly describe these
resources (and ordering info) and fine-tune the titles in time for the
APLIC Conference web-page workshop in March? Thanks mostly to Ruth Sandor,
Gera Draaijer, and Abigail Hourwich for broadening this checklist beyond
top 10; to Peggy D'Adamo, Lisa Newman, Susan Pascquariella who are Webbing
to equally crucial sites.
United States
- Rand-McNally Zip Code Atlas of the U.S. (Has overlays)
- Rand-McNally Road Atlas of the U.S.
- Journals and Newsletters -- see titles indexed in Population Index
- NCHS Vital Statistics of the U.S. (Annual, 3 vol.)
- Vital and Health Statistics Series (#Rainbow Series#, all)
- Advance Data
- Monthly Vital Statistics Report
- US Census - Census in print formats for local state and cities
- CD-ROM for regions
- County and City Data Book (yearly and on CD-ROM)
- Current Population Reports
- Historical Statistics of the United States (2 volumes)
- Monthly Product Announcement; Census and You; Catalog
- Statistical Abstract of the U.S. (Yearly and on CD-ROM
- U.S. Government Manual (Yearly, GPO, $33)
International
- An up-to-date almanac: e.g. The World Almanac and Book of Facts,
1996 ($9.95)
- Atlases: New York Times World Atlas; National Geographic
- Handbook of National Population Censuses
- Population Reference Bureau: World Population Data Sheet
- United Nations Publications
- All UN Category XIII documents (standing order)
- Demographic Yearbook (annual, New York, U.N., $125.00)
- World Population Prospects and Projections
- U.N. Statistical Yearbook
- U.N. Population Conference Reports: Cairo, Beijing, Istanbul
- United Nations and the Advancement of Women, 1945-1996
- UNDP Human Development Report (yearly)
- UNFPA Inventory of Population Projects in Developing Countries
Around the World
- UNFPA State of the World's Population
- UNICEF State of the World's Children (yearly)
- U.S. Dept. Of State Background Notes
- World Population Profile: 1994 (D.C.: U.S. Bureau of Census)
- World Bank (check their Web
site and catalogs regularly!)
- Social Indicators of Development (yearly, also on diskette)
- World Development Report (yearly $22.95 P.B. / $45.95 hardbound)
- World Tables (yearly, $40.00)
- World Data CD-ROM (great if you can figure out "Stars"
program)
Jean Sack
Head Librarian
Population Center Library
Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health
Since 1968, the Carolina Population Center (CPC) has been collecting
papers presented during the annual meeting of the Population Association
of America (PAA). During that time, the library has collected and
catalogued over 4,200 papers. (These printed papers are available for 15
cents per page to cover photocopying and shipping costs.) All PAA papers
are searchable from the CPC online catalog, accessible over the Internet.
- Telnet to library.unc.edu
- Login with the user name library
- Select UNC-CH Library Catalogs (option 1)
- Select Carolina Population Center Library (option 3)
- Follow the on-screen help to search the catalog
In 1995, two changes occurred in the solicitation process for PAA papers
which may be of interest to APLIC members. First, the CPC
library, the Johns Hopkins University (JHU) Population Center library,
and the Population Studies and
Training Center at Brown University entered into a cooperative
agreement for joint solicitation of the papers. So, in 1995 and again in
1996, authors of PAA papers received one letter requesting three copies of
their paper. When only one copy was received, the CPC library made
additional copies to send to JHU and Brown. The three libraries made
special efforts to obtain copies of papers from their researchers for the
PAA collections.
Also for the first time in 1995, the letter which was sent to PAA
authors requested permission to make papers available on the Internet. The
author was offered the option of either sending an electronic copy of the
paper or of allowing CPC staff to scan the paper using OCR technology. In
1995, permission was received to make about 29% (42 of 147) of the papers
available on the Internet. Of those papers, a surprising majority of them
were not sent in electronic format and so required scanning. Since
scanning is a time-consuming process, CPC staff selected only a subset to
make available. Eighteen papers are currently accessible from the CPC home
page, although equations and tables are still missing in some. One paper
is linked to the document at the University of Wisconsin's Center for
Demography and Ecology (CDE). Another four or five papers will be made
available as time permits.
In 1996, for the second time, permission was again requested from
authors to have their papers made available on the Internet. So far this
year, permission has been received to make 60 of 227 papers available. Of
those, many (41) have once again asked that the papers be scanned. Over
time, we expect that more authors will make their papers available in
electronic format either at their home institutions or by sending them to
CPC in electronic format. It is also worth noting that POPLINE is now part
of this cooperative effort. As JHU receives PAA papers, they are shared
with the POPLINE staff which no longer independently solicits from PAA
authors for abstracting.
The first 1996 paper is now online (http://www.cpc.unc.edu/pubs/paa_papers/1996/barber.html)
and represents a good example of the potential benefit of increasing the
number of full-text documents on the Internet. The 1996 paper, by Jennifer
S. Barber and William G. Axinn of Pennsylvania State University, cites a
1995 PAA paper by the same authors and also available online. The cited
reference for the 1996 paper is therefore linked to the full-text of the
1995 paper. We hope to increase the number of cross-links in full-text
documents available from the CPC Web site.
PAA papers online at CPC are treated in many similar ways to those
available in print. First, most of the online papers are also available in
the CPC print collection. (We hope to phase the print copy out, over
time.) All of the online papers are catalogued and subject indexed. (The
1996 papers are in the process of being indexed and catalogued.) We have
carried that over to the online format; each PAA paper has the same
POPLINE keywords as does the print version. Those keywords are available
for display in the online version, although we are not yet using the HTML
Meta code for embedding keywords in the document. The cataloging record
includes the URL for Web documents:
- Record #1
- PAA95-121
- Title
:The case for rapid assessment surveys for family
planning program evaluation / Kate Macintyre.
- Author: Macintyre, Katherine E.
- Published: 1995.
- Subject
- Family planning program evaluation
- Data collection Surveys
- Developing countries
- Material: 17, [2] p.
- Note: Paper presented at Population Association of America
Annual Meeting, San Francisco, Calif., Apr. 6-8, 1995.
- ADDED 960507
- Selected references: p. 14-17.
- Electronic and print versions available.
- System requirements for Web version: Internet connection with
Web browser.
- Mode of access: available through CPC's Web Page (URL: http://www.cpc.unc.edu/pubs/paa_papers/1995/macintyre.html).
- System ID no: XAP-9554
- LOCATION: CPC Elect. Res.-Internet-CPC CPC Web Page http://www.cpc.unc.edu/pubs/paa_papers/1995/macintyre.html).
- c.1, Available
- LOCATION: CPC Pop. Assn. of Amer. Papers--CALL NUMBER:
PAA95-121
A few authors have let us know that their PAA papers are already
available in full-text at a different site. When that happens, we catalog
the paper, embed the remote URL into the cataloguing record, and, for now,
include the paper title with the remote link in the online list of PAA
papers, as we have done with the CDE paper mentioned above.
If you would like to view the PAA papers available online, point your
Web browser to http://www.cpc.unc.edu.
From the CPC home page, click on population-related papers. Suggestions
and comments will be welcomed.
Elizabeth A. Evans
Associate Director for Information Services
Carolina Population Center
University of North Carolina
Email: evans@unc.edu
The APLIC treasurer seeks approval from the members to change the
bylaws with regards to the fiscal year. She would like to change the
fiscal year from the calendar year to October 1 - September 30. This
enables her to present a completed financial report to the Board of
Directors at the October board meeting and begin a new fiscal year right
before the annual membership renewals in November.
Gera Draaijer
APLIC Treasurer
Librarian
Population Research Center
University of Texas Email: draaijer@prc.utexas.edu
|