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
Editors:
Nicole Pelsinsky, Center for Communications Programs, Johns Hopkins
University, 111 Market Place, Suite 310, Baltimore, MD. 21202.
Phone: 410-659-6168; Fax: 410-659-6266; e-mail: npelsins@jhuccp.org
Jean Sack, Hopkins Population Center, Johns
Hopkins University, 615 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205.
Phone: 410-614-5222; Fax 410-955-1215; email: jsack@jhsph.edu
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Presidents' Message
By Lisa A. Newman and Anne
K. Ilacqua, APLIC-I Co-Presidents
We were pleased to see such a good turnout at the
APLIC-I Annual Meeting. Working together to plan a Conference Program was
enlightening and rewarding (and a lot of hard work!) To those of you who
helped by giving us suggestions for speakers, thank you! What we found is
that the logical choices for speakers are often those whose schedules are
too busy for them to accept. Those speakers who come for PAA, though they
might express a willingness to address APLIC-I members, are reluctant to
take the time to come earlier. We were very pleased with the speakers who
were kind enough to accept and from where we sat, it was evident that many
of you found some of these speakers moving. Thanks, too, to those of you who
expressed your appreciation to us for taking on the work of planning the
meeting and for telling us how much you enjoyed it.
Over the past year and particularly quite recently, organization members
have expressed their concern at the loss of members' positions in their
organizations. This is painful, of course, to the individuals, but APLIC-I
members are also affected by the loss of these special people we have come
to know and appreciate. One of our members recently said:
"I am so disappointed about what is happening right now... it is
happening to dear friends, and that is really sad, another and more
frightening thing is that it seems that we are seeing the beginning of the
end of the whole "population effort." I really do hope that I am
wrong."
We hope that he is wrong, too, but agree that it is worrisome.
We are happy to note, however, that we do have many new members. We have
newly-revised by-laws. We have committees and archives and online resources
and interested, enthusiastic and hard-working members. The APLIC-I Board
will be meeting at Brown in Providence on September 17 and 18th to continue
our efforts. If you have any ideas or suggestions which you would like us to
consider, please send them to your Presidents or any Board member. If you
would like to attend the Board Meetings, please e-mail or call Anne Ilacqua
at Anne_Ilacqua@Brown.edu or
(401)863-1863.
At our 1998 Banquet, one member rose to say that she looks forward to our
Annual Meeting because APLIC-I members are like family. One of the tangible
benefits of APLIC-I is the expeditious interlibrary loan service, but there
are also fringe benefits such as becoming acquainted with and getting to
know one's counterparts in organizations and institutions around the nation
(and sometimes around the world) and sharing ideas, problems, solutions and
concerns with them.
As Presidents, we look forward to a rewarding and productive year!
Nika Bareket's baby and maternity leave are expected shortly after July
4, 1998. Two libraries are merging at the Population Studies Center at the
University of Michigan this summer. We appreciate Nika's initial CD-ROM
review in this issue of the Communicator.
Bob McCann: APLIC-I president 1996-97, Bob is leaving the Florida State
University Center for the Study of Population after his position was cut to
half time for fy99. He has just hosted a housewarming in his new home in
Tallahassee and welcomes continued contact from APLIC-I friends as he begins
a job search. Address and phone are: 2831 BOATNER STREET, TALLAHASSEE, FL
32304. Phone: (850) 504 - 0606.
If you would like to contribute to the Communicator, below is a
list of possible topics. Your contributions can carry a byline (potential
for your resume!) and should be submitted to Jean Sack at jsack@jhsph.edu
or to Nicole Pelsinsky at npelsins@jhuccp.org.
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Marketing tips
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Demographics: births, deaths, marriages, retirements, awards, job
changes, new members, committee appointments, honors, etc.
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Reference question tips: Q&A with approach to answering questions
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Reviews of Web sites. Maybe using a template for review. (i.e. What
kind of questions to address in the review?) If this is done, it might
be helpful to have the review previewed by the web site manager for
counterpoints.
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Biographies of board members... now would be a good time with the
elections over.
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Cartoons
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Reviews of new journals
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Book reviews
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Conference summaries: ALA, SLA, MLA, others--with a specific view to
things of interest to APLIC-type folks
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Library profiles: What a library does, who it serves, what the
coverage of the collection is, etc.
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Reviews of CD-ROMs. (Perhaps, to be forward-thinking, this category
could be combined with book reviews, new journal reviews, and Web site
reviews to be a general review section.)
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Responses from one or more libraries to questions like:
A Cornucopia of Connections
By Maryann Belanger -
Librarian, Office of Population Research
During the second week of December, 1997, I had the distinct pleasure of
visiting four specialized demography institutions (INED, INSEE, CICRED,
CEPED) in Paris, France. I had been invited to tour these facilities and
speak with the directors of their libraries and information centers by
Jacques Veron, Director of International Relations at INED. I had met M.
Veron in 1996 during his visit to Princeton's Office of Population Research.
At that time, I provided a tour of the Population Research Library and
discussed the services offered to our patrons. My INED-sponsored visit would
hopefully increase the networking between our library and the French
insitutions.
The Institut National d'Etudes Demographiques (INED) and its library
recently celebrated their 50th anniversary. The library directed by
Francoise Meunier (meunier@ined.fr) supports over 160 researchers. A staff
of nine, five professionals and 4 paraprofessionals provides reference and
interlibrary loan services. The INED collection contains 60,000 volumes and
500 periodical titles. The classification system permits shelving by size
and acquisition date code number. While this system works well for this
closed stack facility and does provide the searching patron an opportunity
to immediately locate new acquisitions, it seriously limits serendipity.
Most of their clientele is in-house, but reference questions from outside
patrons do arrive by telephone or mail.
The records of censuses, vital statistics and monographs from 1987 to the
present are in the INED database as are the records of all INED
publications. M. Meunier and her staff employ a number of electronic
resources, such as POPLINE, PopIndex, CNRS (National Center for Scientific
Research), Pascal (journal article database) and Francis (humanities
database). We discussed a number of possible enhancements to her facility,
such as: more open stacks, development of a more workable classification
system, expansion of patron services, improvement of the cataloging database
and increasing the visibility of the library. I am hoping to arrange a
reciprocal visit of M. Meunier to a number of U. S. demography libraries in
New York, Philadelphia and Washington during the fall of 1998.
INSEE (Institut National de la Statistique et des Etudes Economiques) was
the second library visited. INSEE is the primary statistical unit of the
French government and is responsible for the production of national surveys
(both demographic and economic) and counts. The documentation center with
its staff of 37 supports over 1500 researchers and is directed by Marguerite
Weil. Its closed stack collection consists of 100,000 books and 8,500 serial
titles of which 3,500 are still active. The online public catalof starts
with material from 1982 and items are added as they circulate. The
classification system is identical to that of INED's. While she plans on
retaining the closed stack policy and the in-place classification system, M.
Weil is in the process of purchasing a new computer system for the catalog.
She also hopes to improve the information center's WEB presence as well as
increasing accessibility of holdings' information for her in-house clients.
My visit to CICRED (Comite International de Cooperation dans les
Recherches Nationales en Demographie) provided a change of direction. I was
speaking not to the director of a library or information center, but to a
publisher of demographic material. CICRED was established in 1972 to act as
a liaison organization to all the member organizations attending the World
Population Conference in Bucharest. CICRED works to develop cooperation
among international population resesarch centers; to promote research, and
to provide links between UNPD, UNFPA. WHO and FAO. Hartati Ayral (ayral@cicred.ined.fr),
the assistant to the director, discussed several
topics: the usability and usage of their publications; the issue of whether
to translate more of their publications into English; and the relevance of
the PoPIN thesaurus. She wrapped up our discussion by pointing out a number
of expanding CICRED research areas, such as ubranization, aging,
international migration, and the interdisciplinary analysis of interactions
between Demography, Economics and Society.
CEPED (Centre Francais sur la Population et le Developpement) was the
last research institution on my agenda. It is the youngest of the four
facilities. Established in 1988 and supporting a fairly small complement of
researchers (25) compared to INSEE and INED, CEPED aims to promote research,
training and cooperation among developing countries with special emphasis on
French-speaking Africa and Vietnam (especially in respect to relationships
between population and development). The library which has a staff of two
and is headed by Francoise Gubry (f.gubry@ceped.ined.fr) is somewhat
different from the others I visited. Cataloging is based on a variation of
the PoPIN Thesaurus using broad subject headings. Access is not restricted
and the stacks are open to all patrons. 15,000 books, 170 journal titles,
plus conference proceedings, statistical data, dissertatiosn and microforms
are the resources provided by this library. An excellent collection of
censuses from French-speaking Africa are part of the collection. A local
database of holdings has been maintained since the library's inception. M.
Guibry plans to incorporate new serviced and materials. She hopes to add a
GIS capability and to expand Asian and Latin American resources with an
emphasis on Mexico and international migraion. She is also working to put
the online catalog on the CEPED WEB site.
In addition to spending fruitful hours with librarians and publishers, I
also has an opportunity to sample a cornucopia of other connections with the
editors of INED'S monograph series and the journal, POPULATION, archivists,
WEB masters and institute directors.
Several re-occurring themes were obvious throughout my visit to these
institutions:
1. Networking is vital in order to produce the widest dissemination of
knowledge.
2. We need to share our expertise in order to provide the best possible
service for our patrons.
3. French librarians are confronted with the exact same problems as U.
S.librarians, i.e. copyright, document delivery, melding new technologies
with traditional library philosophy and practice.
APLIC CD-ROM Survey Results
By Nika Bareket, Population
Studies Center, University of Michigan
The Population Studies Library at the University of Michigan currently
relies heavily on print materials and on information available over the WWW.
One of the projects that I wanted to work on over the summer was to start
collecting materials in CD-ROM format. I felt that these could be a big
improvement over many print resources, and could provide faster and easier
access to much of the information and statistics that needs to be accessed
frequently, especially if accessed over our network. One of the first steps
I took in identifying these resources was to send an inquiry to the APLIC
listserv. I got some great responses, which I found very helpful, as well as
a number of inquiries about whether I would be willing to share the results
of this somewhat impromptu survey with other APLIC members.
First of all, I would like to send a big thanks to all those who
responded. I received about 12 responses, not counting those who wanted only
to express their interest. What I have compiled here is a basic summary of
most of the information that was sent to me. What I didn't include are
resources that seemed to fall more under the category of data sets (i.e. National
Longitudinal Surveys, Linked Birth/Infant Death data, etc.) since this
was not really the focus of my inquiry.
Results
Not surprisingly, the most highly recommended item was POPLINE.
Most libraries have this on a single user CD from Silverplatter or NISC,
while some get access through the online catalog of their main university
library system. POPLINE is a heavily used resource and
seems to be a reliable mainstay for the APLIC members who replied. One
person indicated that POPLINE was also useful as a teaching
tool for international students (NISC version.)
Ranking second in usefulness were the 1990 U.S. Census materials. Items
specifically mentioned here were the 1990 U.S. Census CDs, Census CD +
maps and Census CD by Geolytics. All the libraries that
mentioned these (nearly everyone that responded) felt that the electronic
versions were a significant improvement over print versions. Released this
spring, several respondents indicated that CensusCD+maps is a great
new resource, with its mapping capabilities tied into the data available
from the Census Bureau.
Other resources that were common to a number of libraries and were well
liked by library users were many of the products put out by NCHS. These
include such things as Advance Data, Health US, Vital and Health
Statistics Series, Monthly Vital Statistics Reports, Healthy People 2000,
etc. Additional popular choices were resources relating to AIDS and
fertility. More than one institution owns and likes the AIDSCAP
Electronic Library, National Survey of Family Growth, and Health
and Nutrition Financing and Sustainability in Developing Countries in
CD-ROM format.
One person gave a glowing review of Demographics '94 (there are
subsequent versions of this CD issued for 1995, 1996, and 1998 as well.)
This product includes features such as the ability to create and view
charts, graphs, and population pyramids for a variety of different
countries, and print them out in color (if you have a color printer) for
presentations or for demonstrating how population pyramids change. This
program was developed for UNFPA and uses such things as the U.N.
Estimates and Projections, IIASA Population Scenarios, etc. Demographics
'98 sounds like it would be a great resource for any demography or
population studies center.
Part of the question that I posted to the listserv dealt not just with
specific products, but also what type of information people preferred to
have in electronic format. Answers to this were widely varied. Some people
feel that the best things to have on CD are basic statistical data from
organizations like the UN or World Bank. Others keep their electronic
resources to a minimum and have little else besides POPLINE.
Still other people mentioned that they liked buying reference materials
(indexes, abstracts, and yearbooks), while some respondents felt just the
opposite. Collection policies for electronic products seem to be very
individualized, depending largely on the library, and the preferences of its
users.
List of CDs.
The following is a list, in alphabetical order, of titles of electronic
resources mentioned in the survey with any additional information that the
respondent wanted to share. I have put stars next to the products that are
held by more than one institution. Your editors have added website URLs for
additional information.
Dear Colleague: The following
are brief summaries and links to PAI's latest publications, factsheets and
updates located on PAI's Web site at http://www.populationaction.org.
New Materials
Africa's Population
Challenge: Accelerating Progress in Reproductive Health
http://www.populationaction.org/programs/afpop/afpop_index.htm
Change and challenge are the two principal themes of this new study.
Dramatic changes in government policies mean that today, two-thirds of
countries in the region have active family planning programs.
Nevertheless, sub-Saharan Africa faces a critical challenge with respect
to meeting the reproductive health needs of its rapidly growing
population.
The new PAI study endeavors
to present a comprehensive overview of this challenge and the diversity of
the regional responses. From mass media AIDS prevention campaigns to
family planning services directed at youth, sub-Saharan Africa is home to
innovative approaches and programs that are part of a picture of change
across the region.
What Birth Dearth?
Why World Population is Still Growing
http://www.populationaction.org/why_pop/birthdearthfs.htm
The world's population is still increasing by over 80 million people a
year, despite the trend worldwide towards smaller families. Moreover
population will continue to grow for at least the next half century and by
at least another two billion people.
This factsheet outlines and
explains current population trends and stresses the importance of
expanding family planning services to enable more couples to have the
smaller, healthier families they desire.
Politics of
Population Assistance
http://www.populationaction.org/politics/political.htm
As PAI monitors the Foreign Affairs Bill and the "Global Gag
Rule" provision, we continue to post the latest developments on this
Web site in a timely fashion. The site also contains a background
factsheet on the Gag Rule provision currently attached to H.R. 1757, the
Foreign Affairs Reform Act.
Thanks again for visiting and
please don't hesitate to contact us with suggestions on ways to improve
the site.
To subscribe to PAI Pop
Alerts, send an email to majordomo@nmpinc.com
with only the words subscribe popact-list in the body of
the message.
To unsubscribe from PAI Pop Alerts send an email to majordomo@nmpinc.com
with only the words unsubscribe popact-list in the body of the message.
Population Action
International
1120 19th Street NW #550
Washington, DC 20036 U.S.A.
Tel: 202.659.1833
Fax: 202.293.1795
The Scout Report has
established a metasite for topics and web-mounted technical papers in the
Social Sciences: http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/scout/report/socsci/metapage/index.html
We note that Wisconsin's working papers on population web site is linked
on the site. Other categories include Full Text Papers and Articles,
Tables of Contents for New Journals, Government Papers, Publishers, Think
Tank Policy Papers, Data/Statistics, Conferences. Listed below are several
examples of the items/organizations with full-text or summaries available.
Three New Working Papers from
the Census Bureau:
"How Well Does the Current Population Survey Measure the Foreign Born
Population in the United States?" (Number 22) http://www.census.gov/population/www/documentation/twps0022/twps0022.html
"Poverty, Family Structure, and Child Well-Being: Indicators From the
SIPP" (Number 23) http://www.census.gov/population/www/documentation/twps0023.html
"Child Well-Being Indicators From the SIPP" (Number 24) http://www.census.gov/population/www/documentation/twps0024/twps0024.html
The Census Bureau has
recently posted Population Division Working Papers No. 22, 23, and 24
(titles listed above), on its website. The first, by A. Dianne Schmidley
and J. Gregory Robinson, reviews and evaluates the use of CPS data as an
indicator of the social and economic well-being of the foreign born
population. The second, by Jason M. Fields and Kristin E. Smith, examines
the efficacy of SIPP as a measure of child well-being. The last paper,
written by Kristin E. Smith, Loretta E. Bass, and Jason M. Fields,
provides figures from four areas of child well-being: early childhood
experiences, parent-child interaction, school-age enrichment activities,
and children's academic experience. [MD] The Scout Report 5/19/98
RAND Corporation Rodolfo A.
Bulatao, "The Value of Family Planning Programs in Developing
Countries"--RAND Corporation [.pdf] Summary: http://www.rand.org/publications/MR/MR978/
Teresa Frydryk, APLIC member
from JSI Research and Training Institute in Boston, announces the
availability of Sexual Assault Prevention: A Catalog of
Educational Materials. It lists over 500 training publications,
multi-media kits, posters, and videos as well as Internet sites that can
be used for sexual assault prevention education in school and community
settings. The materials in the catalog are arranged by broad age
categories such as young children, pre-teens and teenagers, young adults,
and older adults. Separate sections list materials for adult survivors,
parents and concerned adults, and health and human service professionals.
To request a free copy, contact:
Kathy Girod, Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Sexual Assault
Prevention and Survivor Services Program,
250 Washington Street, Boston, MA 02108-4619
Voice: 617-624-5489 / E-mail: Kathy.Girod@state.ma.us
The National Longitudinal
Study of Adolescent Health by the Carolina Population Center at the
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Wave I and Wave II are on
CD-ROMs. For more information, contact Joyce Tabor tabor.cpc@mhs.unc.edu.
For further information about the contractual datasets, contact:
Jo Jones, Carolina Population Center,
University of North Carolina, CB# 8120,
Chapel Hill, NC 27516-3997
E-mail: jo_jones@unc.edu
Web: http://www.cpc.unc.edu/projects/addhealth/addhealth_home.html
The AIDSCAP Electronic
Library CD-ROM from FHI offers 300 full-text publications searchable
by simple word queries, author name, title, or a keyword. Most documents
are reproduced in their entirety, accompanied by photos, charts and
graphics from the original print publications. Nine areas are covered:
Behavior Change Communication (BCC), Behavioral Research, Condom
Programming, Epidemiology, Evaluation, Gender, Policy, Program Management,
Sexually Transmitted Diseases. For more information, e-mail:
cdrom@fhi.org
http://www.fhi.org/ctu/cdrom.html
CensusCD+Maps from
GeoLytics.
Windows (95, NT, or 3.1x) CD-ROM. A demographics and mapping software
product combining 50 gigabytes of data with advanced thematic mapping
capability. CensusCD+Maps lets anyone create colorful thematic
data maps, down to the neighborhood level of census block groups, with no
mapping or GIS experience required. All of the data, boundaries, and
software to create results are on the one disc. CensusCD+Maps
eliminates the hassles of importing data and boundaries required by most
mapping software. GeoLytics sells CensusCD+Maps directly for
$249.95 for a single user license; $750 for LAN/CD-Tower license.
GeoLytics can be reached by phone at 800-577-6717, by fax at 732-651-2721,
or by e-mail at info@gcensuscd.com..
See also their website at http://www.censuscd.com/cdmaps/censuscd_maps.htm.
The CDC Division of
Reproductive Health has published the final report for the 1996
Romania Young Adult Reproductive Health Survey (English or Romanian),
the final report for the Three-City Reproductive Health Survey in
Russia (English), and the final report for the 1996 Honduras
Reproductive Health Survey (Spanish). Single copies are available
free of charge from the Behavioral Epidemiology and Demographic Research
Branch, DRH, CDC, MS K-35, Atlanta, GA 30333; Fax: 770.488.5965.
ImageBase is a small
database developed by the CCP, Media/Materials Clearinghouse which
includes over 300 international reproductive health posters and other
materials from North America, Africa, Asia, Latin America, Near East, and
the New Independent States. The Media/Materials Clearinghouse has
permission to provide access to all materials in ImageBase except
those produced by the United States government, which are in public
domain. These posters are a small part of the Media/Materials
Clearinghouse collection of over 25,000 posters, pamphlets, videos,
audiotapes, photographs, flipcharts, kits, and other materials produced to
promote reproductive health worldwide. Take a look at:
http://www.jhuccp.org/mmc/imagbas.stm.
For a modified CD-ROM version contact Peggy D'Adamo at mmc@jhuccp.org.
Premarital Sexuality
Among Young People, 1973 Data set on the Internet. Principal
Investigator: John DeLamater. This study focuses on the social aspects of
premarital sexuality, socio-psychological characteristics, current sexual
behavior, and contraceptive knowledge and use among young people in
Madison, Wisconsin. Information on personal and family characteristics,
sexual experience, peer group influence, and self-image was also
collected. Web: http://dpls.dacc.wisc.edu/Premsex73/.
Reproductive Health
Training for Primary Providers: A SourceBook for Curriculum Development
(User's Guide and eight modules, 1997) provides practical solutions for
developing a performance-based curriculum for training primary providers
to offer high quality, client-oriented, integrated reproductive health
(RH) care services. Each module includes a detailed analysis of a specific
RH job, the related tasks, skills and knowledge required for providers to
perform the job, as well as assessment tools to evaluate trainee
achievements, and a reference list. Materials in the SourceBook are
adaptable to specific field needs. The User's Guide and six modules are
currently available in English. Web: http://www.med.unc.edu/intrah/pubs.html#rt.
Press Inquiries
Contact:
Michael Brennan, GeoLytics Marketing/PR
781-545-8969, marketing@censuscd.com
GeoLytics compresses 75
CD-ROMs of demographic data and boundaries onto ONE easy-to-use Windows
disc including thematic mapping software.
East Brunswick, NJ, March
31,1998 - GeoLytics announces the release of CensusCD+Maps - a
demographics and mapping software product combining 50 gigabytes of data
with advanced thematic mapping capability.
GeoLytics' proprietary data
compression allows for the inclusion of over 6,500 variables. The one disc
holds 1990 United States Census data (the complete long form) as well as
1997 Estimates and 2002 Projections of Demographics and Consumer Spending.
Also included are 15 levels of geographic boundaries for 375,000 unique
places in the United States as well as County Time Series statistics for
26 topics including Crime, Agriculture, Business Earnings, Retail,
Industry, Government, etc. Data can be exported for use in other software
packages.
The integrated thematic
mapping capability creates full color data maps, and display census data
down to the neighborhood level. This flexible tool provides built in map
viewing and generates maps from .DBF files. A virtual variable calculator
allows users to perform mathematical functions on the data and
automatically map results. The map viewer exports map boundaries in GIS
formats, ArcView and MapInfo, or saves maps as bitmap files for use with
most office suite or graphics software.
CensusCD+Maps is the
newest product from GeoLytics, the maker of the popular CensusCD.
"Incorporating mapping into a fully loaded data product provides the
end user with a flexible tool for use in almost any application, "
said Craig Cornelius, President of GeoLytics. "We want to change the
paradigm for how demographic data is traditionally sold. From pricing to
data storage to performance and software tools, CensusCD+Maps
provides a complete solution."
GeoLytics sells CensusCD+Maps
directly for $249.95 for a single user license; $750 for LAN/CD-Tower
license. The single CD-ROM runs under Windows 95, 98, NT, or 3.1x. For
more detailed information on data and mapping visit GeoLytics ' web site
at http://www.geolytics.com.
GeoLytics, Inc., based in East Brunswick, NJ, is a privately held company,
developing and distributing affordable software products for analyzing
geographically based information under Microsoft Windows operating
systems. CensusCD and CensusCD+Maps are trademarks of
GeoLytics, Inc. All other trademarks are property of their respective
holders GeoLytics can be reached by phone at 800-577-6717, by fax at
732-651-2721, or by e-mail at info@geolytics.com.
New
Projects Funded by USAID
MEASURE
stands for Monitoring and Evaluation to Assess and Use Results. It is a
new project funded by USAID and jointly run by Macro Internationa, the
Carolina Population Center, Population Reference Bureau, the U.S. Bureau
of the Census and the Division of Reproductive Health of the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. Visit the web site at: http://www.measureprogram.org
to find our more about it.
Horizons
is a global five-year (1997-2002) operations
research project designed to identify components of effective HIV/AIDS
programs and policies, test potential solutions to problems in prevention,
care, support, and service delivery, and disseminate and utilize findings
with a fiew toward replication and scaling-up of successful interventions.
Visit the web site at: http://www.popcouncil.org/horizons/
to find out more about it.
IMPACT,
the Implementing AIDS Prevention and Care Project,
funded by a five-year cooperative agreement awarded by USAID, will support
efforts to bring state-of-the-art HIV/AIDS prevention and care programming
to resource-poor nations where the spread of the pandemic threatens
advances in health and development. Together, FHI and its five partners --
Management Sciences for Health, PATH, Population Services International,
the Institute for Tropical Medicine, and the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill -- bring to the project a wide range of expertise in
program design and management, behavioral change and biomedical
interventions and research, behavior change communication, technical and
management training and capacity building, mass media dissemination,
program evaluation, policy development and advocacy, and diagnosis and
management of sexually transmitted infections (STIs). To read the press
release visit the FHI web site at http://www.fhi.org/general/newsrel.html#anchor73421
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