TabbedDescription & RationaleInternational Population Census Publications for Latin America and the Caribbean, 1990-2005. Printed volumes of Latin American tabular data, held by the U.S. Census Bureau International Library (subset of larger, comprehensive collection held by the Census Bureau), per Lara Cleveland at IPUMS. The Census Bureau participates in an international publication exchange with counterpart national statistical agencies, a program that has contributed many publications within the Bureau's International Collection. The Bureau's International Collection began growing substantially with the Census Bureau’s increased international analytical and technical assistance activities in the post-World War II years. The entire collection was cataloged at the turn of the millennium and moved to its current location in 2007. Through a joint project, CRL and IPUMS will digitize and preserve data from printed population census volumes from the U.S. Census Bureau's international collection. The University of Minnesota already has agreements with more than 100 countries to disseminate census microdata samples and related census documentation for scholarly and policy research use. IPUMS is confident that the vast majority, if not all, agreements cover dissemination of published reports. The first phase of the project will produce high quality digital scans of Latin American historical census results. Reasons for consideration: Recomended by Lara Cleveland, IPUMS. The Census Bureau's International Collection is among the very largest of its kind in North America and contains nearly 115,000 volumes. Statistical materials from countries around the world as well as “sub-collections” of UN materials, periodicals, and the general/reference resources compose the collection. Many materials are in the native languages of the country of origin. Special historical items within the collection include the 1899 Census of Cuba and other that substantially pre-date the assembly of the International Collection. Data from published census volumes are currently unusable for systematic scientific analysis because they are locked in thousands of paper documents, PDF files, and spreadsheets dispersed across hundreds of websites and libraries. Furthermore the formats of the data tables are heterogeneous and lack machine-processable metadata. The production of high-quality scans from census reports would be a significant contribution to the world’s population data infrastructure. The long-term data series will be an invaluable resource for understanding population and social dynamics over a period of historically rapid change. Author(s): VariousPublisher(s): VariousSource Format: PaperTarget Format: DigitalProgram: GCI Latin AmericaResource Types: DatasetGovernment documentsRegions: Latin America and CaribbeanCountries of Origin: ArgentinaBoliviaBrazilColombiaCosta RicaCubaDominican RepublicEcuadorEl SalvadorGuatemalaHaitiHondurasMexicoNicaraguaPanamaParaguayPeruPuerto RicoTrinidad and TobagoUruguayVenezuelaPosted: Mar 10, 2017 6:23pmUpdated: Jun 28, 2018 4:19pm Source DetailsMajor Languages: SpanishPortugueseFrenchHolding Institutions: U.S. Census Bureau LibraryPhysical Details: Published volumes of national censuses from Latin America and the Caribbean. Intellectual Property Considerations: Public data unencumbered by copyright restrictions. May be rights in the compilation of particular volumes. Activity StatusCurrentDescription FlaggedyesThe proposal is flagged for further research. VettednoThe proposal has been examined and vetted. BallottednoThe proposal is currently on a committee ballot. ApprovednoThe proposal has been selected for reformatting. Reformatting efforts are pending. ReformattednoThe proposal has been reformatted and access information is now posted. Inactive / DeclinednoNo longer under consideration for reformatting. Print