RADAR - The Regional Australia Database for Ageing Research – has been developed by the ARC Centre of Excellence in Population Ageing Research (CEPAR) using the most recent national data from the ABS 2011 Census of Population and Housing. It is a user-friendly interactive tool for accessing a wide range of demographic and economic indices relevant to population and ageing research from national through to regional levels. RADAR was written in Excel with Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) and presents data in table and graph form, which can be easily exported into another application to work with the information in more detail. RADAR is freely available on the CEPAR website: http://www.cepar.edu.au/rada
Perhaps the only generalisation that can be made about the aged is that they are not all the same; v...
Like other industrialized countries, Australia is facing major population ageing. From 2000 to 2025,...
Report prepared as part of a collaborative project on "Migration Trends in Australia and Britain: Le...
RADAR - The Regional Australia Database for Ageing Research – has been developed by the ARC Centre o...
Background For researchers working in gerontology or the demography of ageing, knowledge of and acc...
The Atlas provides statistics on the population, health, finance, housing and activity of olde...
The Australian population census is now over 100 years old. The capacity to access, analyze and visu...
The demographic resource centre at .idcommunity provides free access to demographic and spatial data...
This paper describes a collaborative project between the Australian Urban Research Infrastructure Ne...
The conventional study of demographic issues typically focuses on the components of population, and ...
In 2011 the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) introduced a radical new statistical geography for...
The study attempts to discuss the development of a time series of Australian Internal Migration (AIM...
This paper illustrates a proof of concept scenario for the application of comprehensive data visuali...
Aim: To describe the Dynamic Analyses to Optimise Ageing (DYNOPTA) project and illustrate its contri...
Aim: To describe the Dynamic Analyses to Optimise Ageing (DYNOPTA) project and illustrate its contri...
Perhaps the only generalisation that can be made about the aged is that they are not all the same; v...
Like other industrialized countries, Australia is facing major population ageing. From 2000 to 2025,...
Report prepared as part of a collaborative project on "Migration Trends in Australia and Britain: Le...
RADAR - The Regional Australia Database for Ageing Research – has been developed by the ARC Centre o...
Background For researchers working in gerontology or the demography of ageing, knowledge of and acc...
The Atlas provides statistics on the population, health, finance, housing and activity of olde...
The Australian population census is now over 100 years old. The capacity to access, analyze and visu...
The demographic resource centre at .idcommunity provides free access to demographic and spatial data...
This paper describes a collaborative project between the Australian Urban Research Infrastructure Ne...
The conventional study of demographic issues typically focuses on the components of population, and ...
In 2011 the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) introduced a radical new statistical geography for...
The study attempts to discuss the development of a time series of Australian Internal Migration (AIM...
This paper illustrates a proof of concept scenario for the application of comprehensive data visuali...
Aim: To describe the Dynamic Analyses to Optimise Ageing (DYNOPTA) project and illustrate its contri...
Aim: To describe the Dynamic Analyses to Optimise Ageing (DYNOPTA) project and illustrate its contri...
Perhaps the only generalisation that can be made about the aged is that they are not all the same; v...
Like other industrialized countries, Australia is facing major population ageing. From 2000 to 2025,...
Report prepared as part of a collaborative project on "Migration Trends in Australia and Britain: Le...