With billions of federal grant dollars potentially at stake, every community has a vested interest in ensuring that its residents are accurately counted in the U.S. Decennial Census of Population and Housing. In the 2010 Census, 20.7% of eligible households failed to return their census forms, implying a response rate of only 79.3%. That amounts to about 22 million households not reached in the last census, the number of which not only affects the quality of the census but also may lead businesses and government officials to make inaccurate decisions when targeting specific populations
This issue brief describes how the census is conducted in rural areas, identifies some of the most d...
The 2010 Census produced exceedingly high quality data, but at the cost of $94 per housing unit. Thi...
The United States’ decennial census is the gold standard for enumerating the country’s population. I...
To identify hard-to-count places, the U.S. Census Bureau has computed low response scores using 25 s...
Because of COVID-19 and other factors, the United States faces the unprecedented challenge of comple...
A UCLA report published today shows that the 2020 Census will severely undercount immigrants, low-in...
Los Angeles County is facing the unprecedented challenge of completing the 2020 census enumeration, ...
The decennial U.S. Census is intended to generate an accurate count of the population for use in all...
Who hasn’t heard that the 2020 Census is upon us? The anticipation and anguish about missing large n...
What systematic evidence is there that people have become more unwilling to cooperate with Census su...
Testimony issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "An accurate d...
Miscounts and undercounts in the census result in a social equity problem that negatively affects co...
In order to know how much accuracy is needed for the 2020 Census – with the appreciation that accura...
The decennial census is the cornerstone of the United States democracy. Its purpose is to determine ...
The U.S. Census is the backbone of the U.S. official statistics system. A decennial census is consti...
This issue brief describes how the census is conducted in rural areas, identifies some of the most d...
The 2010 Census produced exceedingly high quality data, but at the cost of $94 per housing unit. Thi...
The United States’ decennial census is the gold standard for enumerating the country’s population. I...
To identify hard-to-count places, the U.S. Census Bureau has computed low response scores using 25 s...
Because of COVID-19 and other factors, the United States faces the unprecedented challenge of comple...
A UCLA report published today shows that the 2020 Census will severely undercount immigrants, low-in...
Los Angeles County is facing the unprecedented challenge of completing the 2020 census enumeration, ...
The decennial U.S. Census is intended to generate an accurate count of the population for use in all...
Who hasn’t heard that the 2020 Census is upon us? The anticipation and anguish about missing large n...
What systematic evidence is there that people have become more unwilling to cooperate with Census su...
Testimony issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "An accurate d...
Miscounts and undercounts in the census result in a social equity problem that negatively affects co...
In order to know how much accuracy is needed for the 2020 Census – with the appreciation that accura...
The decennial census is the cornerstone of the United States democracy. Its purpose is to determine ...
The U.S. Census is the backbone of the U.S. official statistics system. A decennial census is consti...
This issue brief describes how the census is conducted in rural areas, identifies some of the most d...
The 2010 Census produced exceedingly high quality data, but at the cost of $94 per housing unit. Thi...
The United States’ decennial census is the gold standard for enumerating the country’s population. I...