Accessing the Economist using online academic journal

<p>I access the Economist via an online academic journal like EBSCO Host, to which my school subscribed to allow students’ free access to all the articles. My concern is that the academic journal doesn’t follow the original (either printed or online) version’s organization of topics/headings. For example, the original version categorizes all the articles into one of the following categories:</p>

<p>This week’s print edition
Daily news analysis
Opinion
World politics All world politics Politics this week
Special reports
Business and finance
Business education
Markets and data
Science and technology
Books and arts
People
Diversions</p>

<p>In contrast, different academic journals for the Economist have their own organization of the contents, different from the original table of contents. For example, one academic journal called Academic Search Premier organizes contents as follows:</p>

<p>UNITED States
LETTERS to the editor
GREAT Britain
CHINA
EDITORIALS
CLIMATIC changes – Prevention
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
GREAT Britain – Politics & government – 2007-
IRAN
GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 </p>

<p>Strangely, some journals don’t even present an organization of contents, but merely lists all the articles alphabetically.</p>

<p>What I want to know is this: Do online academic journals provide certain features/options to change its table of contents to exactly match the original’s?</p>