DEMOGRAPHICS DATABASESType of access: 
Free to the public

Faculty, staff, and students only
Google Scholar - [Contents: citations & full text | Coverage: varies | Updates: regularly | Provider: Google]  Google Scholar allows users to search across multiply resources in one search engine. It contains scholarly information from books, journals, reviewed papers, scholarly organizations and repositories, academic publishers and much more. Google scholar automatically links to full-text articles that are in the OLLU library collection. |
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JSTOR - [Contents: full-text & citations | Coverage: varies | Updates: regularly | Provider: JSTOR]  This database contains an interdisciplinary archive of scholarly academic publications that includes journals, manuscripts, and pamphlets. Users have access to the Arts and Sciences I and III Collection, along with the Life Sciences Collection. Topics range from statistics, economics, sociology, and political science, to language and literature, and biological, health, and general science journals. Note: The most recently published issues (past 3-5 years) are not available. |
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Popline - [Contents: citations & abstracts | Coverage: present | Updates: monthly | Provider: National Library of Medicine]  This database provides worldwide coverage of population, family planning, and related health issues, including family planning technology and programs, fertility, and population law and policy. |
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Population Index On the Web - [Contents: citations & abstracts | Coverage: present | Updates: annually | Provider: Princeton University]  This database provides an annotated bibliography of recently published books, journal articles, working papers, and other materials on population topics. A primary reference tool to the world's population literature. |
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World Development Indicators (Dataquery) - [Contents: full text | Coverage: varies | Updates: regularly | Provider: World Bank Group]  This database contains free access to a segment of the World Development Indicators (WDI) database, an extensive collection of data about development. This segment includes 54 topic series indicators for 227 countries and 18 groups, spanning 48 years (1960 to 2008). |