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Percent Percent
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in Household and Living Arrangement Projections at the Subnational Level: An Extended Cohort-Component Approach
> Demography
Published: 04 December 2012
Fig. 3 Percentage distributions of the mean absolute percent errors (APE) of comparisons between the ProFamy projections from 1990 to 2000 (using the data before 1991) and the census observations in 2000, six main indices of households (Fig. 3a) and six main indices of population (Fig. 3b
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in Temporary Integration, Resilient Inequality: Race and Neighborhood Change in the Transition to Adulthood
> Demography
Published: 09 May 2012
Fig. 1 Trajectories of change in neighborhood poverty and percent black among home-leavers who remain in Chicago and home-leavers who exit Chicago, by race/ethnicity: PHDCN 18-year-old cohort
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in Historical Trends in Children Living in Multigenerational Households in the United States: 1870–2018
> Demography
Published: 01 October 2020
Fig. 5 Percentage of children in multigenerational households by education percentiles and race/ethnicity over time. Data come from the 1870–2010 decennial censuses and the 2018 American Community Survey. Estimates are weighted. The sample includes all children (under age 18) with at least one co...
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Published: 01 April 2015
Fig. 1 Female labor force attachment, by age, care status. Proportions and percentages are weighted values
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Journal Article
Demography (1967) 4 (2): 780–797.
Published: 01 June 1967
... to add slightly more than three children to this total. There was little difference in desired family size by sex. About one-half of both men and women had some knowledge of family planning methods, and there was a general interest (75 percent of the men and 90 percent of the women) in learning more...
Journal Article
Demography (1967) 4 (1): 363–373.
Published: 01 March 1967
...) and the percent in the secondary sector is low and positive. In 1960, however, the association is negative (suggesting a possible change in the direction of the association), but city growth rates and the proportion of females married are more closely related to fertility than percent in the secondary sector...
Journal Article
Demography (1966) 3 (2): 319–331.
Published: 01 June 1966
...” surveys employed a 25 percent simple random, though non-overlapping, sample of married women 20–44 years of age whose husbands were living. The only difference in design and execution was the inclusion in the resurvey of questions about the action program. Barring one or two exceptions...
Journal Article
Demography (1969) 6 (4): 435–444.
Published: 01 November 1969
...; (2) number failure; (3) at least one timing failure; (4) at least one timing success; (5) neither success nor failure. For the ever-pregnant women who intended no more children, 32 percent of the exposed were number failures and 62 percent of the rest were timing failures. For the ever-pregnant women...
Journal Article
Evaluation and adjustment of vital registration data from the compulsory registration areas of Ghana
Demography (1968) 5 (1): 86–92.
Published: 01 March 1968
... of 75 percent and 72 percent, respectively. For infant mortality and deaths in general, it was possible only to demonstrate, by an analysis of the sex ratios, that errors are inherent in the plan. Suggestions are made as to how some of the errors which now occur can be rectified. Continued research...
Journal Article
Demography (1967) 4 (1): 341–350.
Published: 01 March 1967
... as evidenced by the nonmatched households that were found in 1964 but not present in 1965. More important, the data indicate that S percent of the nonmobile family households became individual households, or the reverse, and 15 percent of all the remaining households changed in family size. These last two...
Journal Article
Demography (1966) 3 (2): 352–377.
Published: 01 June 1966
... “motivated” movement to Santiago, and other aspects oj the migratory move itself were also topics of inquiry. Tabulations of this survey portray Santiago as a city of great in-migration. The flow is estimated to be between 1.5 and 1.7 percent per year. Among the population 15 years of age or over, about 50...
Journal Article
Demography (1967) 4 (1): 126–134.
Published: 01 March 1967
.... A study, carried out by the author, of 1 percent of the rural households in Mathura and Saharanpur districts in Uttar Pradesh and in Rohtak district in Panjab has brought out that nearly SO percent of the ever-widowed are remarried. The survey covered 6,211 households, of which 887 were Muslim...
Journal Article
Demography (1974) 11 (1): 1–23.
Published: 01 February 1974
... for the population 65 and over based on”Medicare” enrollments and expected sex ratios. These estimates indicate an overall net underenumeration of 5.3 million persons or 2.5 percent in 1970, as compared with 5.1 million or 2.7 percent in 1960, and a net underenumeration of 1.9 percent for whites and of 7.7 percent...
Journal Article
Demography (1970) 7 (1): 87–91.
Published: 01 February 1970
... 4.6 to 2.3 percent when dummy variables and stratification were used to supplement the conventional indicators. DEMOGRAPHY Volume 7, Number 1 February 1970 IMPROVING POPULATION ESTIMATES WITH THE USE OF DUMMY VARIABLES Donald E. PurseIl Department of Economics and Regional Research Institute, West...
Journal Article
Demography (1972) 9 (1): 13–33.
Published: 01 February 1972
...Roy C. Treadway Abstract The dominance or influence of metropolitan centers in the developing country of Turkey, as measured by gradients of population characteristics (population density, percent urban, sex ratio, percent over five years of age, and percent literate) by distance from the nearest...
Journal Article
Demography (1982) 19 (3): 279–290.
Published: 01 August 1982
..., of the FY1971 cohort of legal immigrants to the United States as of January 1979. The merged data indicate that the cumulative net emigration rate for the entire cohort could have been as high as 50 percent. Canadian emigration was probably between 51 and 55 percent. Emigration rates for legal immigrants from...
Journal Article
Demography (1970) 7 (3): 287–299.
Published: 01 August 1970
... license applications, is that there has been a 32 percent error in reporting mixed race cases. The full significance of this as regards existing data can only be conjectured at present. In Pennsylvania, it would seem, areas of high concentration of nonwhites show the lowest intermarriage rates...
Journal Article
Demography (1968) 5 (1): 318–353.
Published: 01 March 1968
... of death was made possible by matching some 340,000 death certificates, of a total of 535,000 deaths which occurred in the United States during the months May-August, 1960, to the 1960 Census records. Since only about 80 percent of the deaths could be matched to census schedules, provision was made...
Journal Article
Demography (1973) 10 (2): 259–275.
Published: 01 May 1973
... variables. The three independent variables in Zipf’s hypothesis accounted for 57 percent of the variation in interstate migration streams in 1935–1940, 61 percent in 1949–1950, and 68 percent in 1955–1960. The addition of per capita personal income of the states of origin and of destination increased...
Journal Article
Demography (1968) 5 (1): 185–197.
Published: 01 March 1968
... significance. The differences in projected total population owing to differences in patterns of mortality in such projections remain less than one percent. In long-term projections with lower initial expectation of life at birth, however, the models North, East, and South, and the United Nations models tend...
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