Atla Religion Database

Academic journal article database From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Atla Religion Database (ATLA RDB) is an index of academic journal articles in the area of religion.[1] It is updated monthly[2] and published by the American Theological Library Association. The database indexes articles, essays, and book reviews related to a wide range of scholarly fields related to religion. The database is available on a subscription basis through a database aggregator.

ProvidersEBSCO
CostSubscription
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Atla Religion Database
ProducerAmerican Theological Library Association (United States)
Access
ProvidersEBSCO
CostSubscription
Coverage
DisciplinesTheology, religious studies
Format coverageJournal articles, essays, book reviews
Temporal coverage1949–present, with retrospective indexing for some journals back to the nineteenth century
Geospatial coverageGlobal
No. of recordsOver 2.1 million
Update frequencyMonthly
Links
Websitewww.atla.com/products/prodinfo/Pages/ATLA-RDB.aspx
Title list(s)www.atla.com/products/titles/Pages/default.aspx
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The total database includes over 3.0 million article citations from over 2,400+ journals.[3] There are more than a quarter of a million essay citations from more than 18,000 multi-author works. The number of book reviews is over half a million.[4] Atla indexes multi-author works, such as Festschriften and conference proceedings, with separate records for each essay.

Formats

The Atla Religion Database, formerly available on CD-ROM, is a MARC record format database[5] that incorporates several out-of-print indexes, including Religion Index One: Periodicals, Religion Index Two: Multi-Author Works, and Index to Book Reviews in Religion.[1]

Coverage

The database indexes scholarly works on major world religions.[6] There are, however, selection criteria for inclusion according to scholarly merit and scope. More than 60 languages are represented. Some records cover articles as far back as the 19th century. Atla claims full coverage for core journals back to 1949.

Scholarly fields with significant degrees of coverage include:

See also

References

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