61 datasets found
  1. w

    ACS Demographics by Congressional District (5-year)

    • wtfvote.us
    html
    Updated Jul 8, 2021
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    What The Vote (2021). ACS Demographics by Congressional District (5-year) [Dataset]. https://wtfvote.us/
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    htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 8, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    What The Vote
    License

    https://www.usa.gov/government-workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works

    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Census Bureau ACS 5-year estimates aggregated to congressional districts and states, used for charts and profiles on WTFVote.

  2. 2011 American Community Survey 1-Year Profiles for the 113th Congressional...

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Sep 18, 2023
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    U.S. Census Bureau (2023). 2011 American Community Survey 1-Year Profiles for the 113th Congressional Districts [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/2011-american-community-survey-1-year-profiles-for-the-113th-congressional-districts
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Sep 18, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    United States Census Bureauhttp://census.gov/
    Description

    The American Community Survey (ACS) is a nationwide survey designed to provide communities a fresh look at how they are changing. The ACS replaced the decennial census long form in 2010 and thereafter by collecting long form type information throughout the decade rather than only once every 10 years. Questionnaires are mailed to a sample of addresses to obtain information about households -- that is, about each person and the housing unit itself. The American Community Survey produces demographic, social, housing and economic estimates in the form of 1-year, 3-year and 5-year estimates based on population thresholds. The strength of the ACS is in estimating population and housing characteristics. The 3-year data provide key estimates for each of the topic areas covered by the ACS for the nation, all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, every congressional district, every metropolitan area, and all counties and places with populations of 20,000 or more. Although the ACS produces population, demographic and housing unit estimates,it is the Census Bureau's Population Estimates Program that produces and disseminates the official estimates of the population for the nation, states, counties, cities and towns, and estimates of housing units for states and counties. For 2010 and other decennial census years, the Decennial Census provides the official counts of population and housing units.

  3. w

    ACS 5-year congressional district rollups

    • wtfvote.us
    Updated Sep 25, 2025
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    (2025). ACS 5-year congressional district rollups [Dataset]. https://wtfvote.us/demographics
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 25, 2025
    License

    https://www.usa.gov/government-workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works

    Description

    Derived indicators from the U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) 5-year estimates aggregated to U.S. House districts.

  4. ACS 5-Year Detailed Tables

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Jul 19, 2023
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    U.S. Census Bureau (2023). ACS 5-Year Detailed Tables [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/acs-5-year-detailed-tables
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 19, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    United States Census Bureauhttp://census.gov/
    Description

    The American Community Survey (ACS) is an ongoing survey that provides data every year -- giving communities the current information they need to plan investments and services. The ACS covers a broad range of topics about social, economic, demographic, and housing characteristics of the U.S. population. Summary files include the following geographies: nation, all states (including DC and Puerto Rico), all metropolitan areas, all congressional districts (114th congress), all counties, all places, and all tracts and block groups. Summary files contain the most detailed cross-tabulations, many of which are published down to block groups. The data are population and housing counts. There are over 64,000 variables in this dataset.

  5. w

    ACS 5-Year Estimates — Congressional District Profiles

    • wtfvote.us
    Updated Jul 15, 2025
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    What The Vote (2025). ACS 5-Year Estimates — Congressional District Profiles [Dataset]. https://wtfvote.us/about
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 15, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    What The Vote
    License

    https://www.census.gov/data/developers/about/terms-of-service.htmlhttps://www.census.gov/data/developers/about/terms-of-service.html

    Description

    American Community Survey 5-year subject-table metrics (demographics, economics, housing, education, internet) aggregated to U.S. congressional districts.

  6. ACS 2014 114th Congressional Districts

    • dcdev.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Jan 13, 2015
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    ESRI R&D Center (2015). ACS 2014 114th Congressional Districts [Dataset]. https://dcdev.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/203c71475be84d0cb403f66fc3f706f5
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 13, 2015
    Dataset provided by
    Esrihttp://esri.com/
    Authors
    ESRI R&D Center
    Area covered
    Description

    114th Congressional Districts; ACS 2014 - January 1, 2014 vintage

  7. g

    2023 ACS 1-Year Supplemental Data Profiles for Congressional Redistricting -...

    • gimi9.com
    • catalog.data.gov
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    2023 ACS 1-Year Supplemental Data Profiles for Congressional Redistricting - 119th Congress [Dataset]. https://gimi9.com/dataset/data-gov_2023-acs-1-year-supplemental-data-profiles-for-congressional-redistricting-119th-congress/
    Explore at:
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The American Community Survey (ACS) is an ongoing survey that provides data every year -- giving communities the current information they need to plan investments and services. The ACS covers a broad range of topics about social, economic, demographic, and housing characteristics of the U.S. population. The 119th Congressional District Data Profiles are available for the nation, all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico (at large). Data profiles contain broad social, economic, housing, and demographic information.

  8. Social by Race (by US Congress) 2017

    • opendata.atlantaregional.com
    Updated Jun 26, 2019
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    Georgia Association of Regional Commissions (2019). Social by Race (by US Congress) 2017 [Dataset]. https://opendata.atlantaregional.com/datasets/social-by-race-by-us-congress-2017/geoservice
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 26, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    The Georgia Association of Regional Commissions
    Authors
    Georgia Association of Regional Commissions
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    This layer was developed by the Research & Analytics Group of the Atlanta Regional Commission, using data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey 5-year estimates for 2013-2017, to show school enrollment, education attainments, and household composition by race and by US Congressional Districts in Georgia.

    The user should note that American Community Survey data represent estimates derived from a surveyed sample of the population, which creates some level of uncertainty, as opposed to an exact measure of the entire population (the full census count is only conducted once every 10 years and does not cover as many detailed characteristics of the population). Therefore, any measure reported by ACS should not be taken as an exact number – this is why a corresponding margin of error (MOE) is also given for ACS measures. The size of the MOE relative to its corresponding estimate value provides an indication of confidence in the accuracy of each estimate. Each MOE is expressed in the same units as its corresponding measure; for example, if the estimate value is expressed as a number, then its MOE will also be a number; if the estimate value is expressed as a percent, then its MOE will also be a percent.

    The user should also note that for relatively small geographic areas, such as census tracts shown here, ACS only releases combined 5-year estimates, meaning these estimates represent rolling averages of survey results that were collected over a 5-year span (in this case 2013-2017). Therefore, these data do not represent any one specific point in time or even one specific year. For geographic areas with larger populations, 3-year and 1-year estimates are also available.

    For further explanation of ACS estimates and margin of error, visit Census ACS website.

    Naming conventions:

    Prefixes:

    None

    Count

    p

    Percent

    r

    Rate

    m

    Median

    a

    Mean (average)

    t

    Aggregate (total)

    ch

    Change in absolute terms (value in t2 - value in t1)

    pch

    Percent change ((value in t2 - value in t1) / value in t1)

    chp

    Change in percent (percent in t2 - percent in t1)

    Suffixes:

    None

    Change over two periods

    _e

    Estimate from most recent ACS

    _m

    Margin of Error from most recent ACS

    _00

    Decennial 2000

    Attributes:

    Attributes and definitions available below under "Attributes" section and in Infrastructure Manifest (due to text box constraints, attributes cannot be displayed here).

    Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Atlanta Regional Commission

    Date: 2013-2017

    For additional information, please visit the Census ACS website.

  9. Arizona ACS 2023 Congressional District

    • arcgis.com
    • azgeo-data-hub-agic.hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Jan 16, 2025
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    Maricopa Association of Governments (2025). Arizona ACS 2023 Congressional District [Dataset]. https://www.arcgis.com/sharing/oauth2/social/authorize?socialLoginProviderName=apple&oauth_state=axbs5C6AJ_HoZJNT2a82jwg..ZLkje6E-iKU0PC39s3HVMZxV_oNcXDkGolyXPeQuEz-6nPge3PCn2gJLBfUTvHJBeULx_-ddNTf7nU6gG8S-SwtHjiFIf1jizHR5V7VaziKeKh1woZxvjEvPwS67I7KdHENvu9r4Q45btPVTDKy4cX2JnArhDQSmh3lCcG5wEkHgONY6wU_GrWk5VmBtqFnyAe4UPopIbjbeCuPz0Q6VtdNq1EVyT4Bhdw0rSRA_kW-pZG-N2dJ2C3aQmZZ17Cfb5H-eXinAN5lXl61-xVLyB5yJCY_LiUIKRYQI2T3Qfb9nGX0d-xzqsrH2CI6xCk39_Xf5gSyPmlHcaouOfvGu_AMlOZneusRTnzceVOY97bnb4l9FGVdLNbGoxMNXPEOyPx4cBPl5
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jan 16, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Maricopa Association of Governments
    License

    Public Domain Mark 1.0https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    This geodatabase contains statistical geographies from the U.S. Census Bureau and have had selected attributes from the 2018-2022 American Community Survey (ACS) 5-Year Estimates attached. A list of fields contained in each feature class' attribute table is also included in this geodatabase. ACS data are based on a sample and are subject to sampling variability. The degree of uncertainty for an estimate is represented through the use of a margin of error (MOE). In addition to sampling variability, the ACS estimates are subject to nonsampling error. The MOE and effect of nonsampling error is not represented in these tables. Supporting documentation on subject definitions, data accuracy, and statistical testing can be found on the American Community Survey website in the Data and Documentation section. Sample size and data quality measures (including coverage rates, allocation rates, and response rates) can be found on the American Community Survey website in the Methodology section. The MOE for individual data elements can be found on the Census website.Note: Although the ACS produces population, demographic and housing unit estimates, the 2020 Census provides the official counts of the population and housing units for the nation, states, counties, cities and towns.

  10. a

    OCACS 2014 Demographic Characteristics for Congressional Districts of the...

    • data-ocpw.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Jan 17, 2020
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    OC Public Works (2020). OCACS 2014 Demographic Characteristics for Congressional Districts of the 114th US Congress [Dataset]. https://data-ocpw.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/5aa79fb15e504c98ba15db922c58aa4a
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 17, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    OC Public Works
    Area covered
    Description

    US Census American Community Survey (ACS) 2014, 5-year estimates of the key demographic characteristics of Congressional Districts (114th US Congress) geographic level in Orange County, California. The data contains 105 fields for the variable groups D01: Sex and age (universe: total population, table X1, 49 fields); D02: Median age by sex and race (universe: total population, table X1, 12 fields); D03: Race (universe: total population, table X2, 8 fields); D04: Race alone or in combination with one or more other races (universe: total population, table X2, 7 fields); D05: Hispanic or Latino and race (universe: total population, table X3, 21 fields), and; D06: Citizen voting age population (universe: citizen, 18 and over, table X5, 8 fields). The US Census geodemographic data are based on the 2014 TigerLines across multiple geographies. The spatial geographies were merged with ACS data tables. See full documentation at the OCACS project github page (https://github.com/ktalexan/OCACS-Geodemographics).

  11. a

    OCACS 2018 Demographic Characteristics for Congressional Districts of the...

    • data-ocpw.opendata.arcgis.com
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Jun 18, 2020
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    OC Public Works (2020). OCACS 2018 Demographic Characteristics for Congressional Districts of the 116th US Congress [Dataset]. https://data-ocpw.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/ocacs-2018-demographic-characteristics-for-congressional-districts-of-the-116th-us-congress
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 18, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    OC Public Works
    Area covered
    Description

    US Census American Community Survey (ACS) 2018, 5-year estimates of the key demographic characteristics of Congressional Districts (116th US Congress) geographic level in Orange County, California. The data contains 105 fields for the variable groups D01: Sex and age (universe: total population, table X1, 49 fields); D02: Median age by sex and race (universe: total population, table X1, 12 fields); D03: Race (universe: total population, table X2, 8 fields); D04: Race alone or in combination with one or more other races (universe: total population, table X2, 7 fields); D05: Hispanic or Latino and race (universe: total population, table X3, 21 fields), and; D06: Citizen voting age population (universe: citizen, 18 and over, table X5, 8 fields). The US Census geodemographic data are based on the 2018 TigerLines across multiple geographies. The spatial geographies were merged with ACS data tables. See full documentation at the OCACS project github page (https://github.com/ktalexan/OCACS-Geodemographics).

  12. a

    OCACS 2016 Demographic Characteristics for Congressional Districts of the...

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com
    • +1more
    Updated Jan 22, 2020
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    OC Public Works (2020). OCACS 2016 Demographic Characteristics for Congressional Districts of the 115th US Congress [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/datasets/OCPW::ocacs-2016-demographic-characteristics-for-congressional-districts-of-the-115th-us-congress/data
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jan 22, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    OC Public Works
    Area covered
    Description

    US Census American Community Survey (ACS) 2016, 5-year estimates of the key demographic characteristics of Congressional Districts (115th US Congress) geographic level in Orange County, California. The data contains 105 fields for the variable groups D01: Sex and age (universe: total population, table X1, 49 fields); D02: Median age by sex and race (universe: total population, table X1, 12 fields); D03: Race (universe: total population, table X2, 8 fields); D04: Race alone or in combination with one or more other races (universe: total population, table X2, 7 fields); D05: Hispanic or Latino and race (universe: total population, table X3, 21 fields), and; D06: Citizen voting age population (universe: citizen, 18 and over, table X5, 8 fields). The US Census geodemographic data are based on the 2016 TigerLines across multiple geographies. The spatial geographies were merged with ACS data tables. See full documentation at the OCACS project github page (https://github.com/ktalexan/OCACS-Geodemographics).

  13. ACS 1-Year Detailed Tables

    • s.cnmilf.com
    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Jul 19, 2023
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    U.S. Census Bureau (2023). ACS 1-Year Detailed Tables [Dataset]. https://s.cnmilf.com/user74170196/https/catalog.data.gov/dataset/acs-1-year-detailed-tables-0eff3
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jul 19, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    United States Census Bureauhttp://census.gov/
    Description

    The American Community Survey (ACS) is a nationwide survey designed to provide communities a fresh look at how they are changing. The ACS replaced the decennial census long form in 2010 and thereafter by collecting long form type information throughout the decade rather than only once every 10 years. Questionnaires are mailed to a sample of addresses to obtain information about households -- that is, about each person and the housing unit itself. The American Community Survey produces demographic, social, housing and economic estimates in the form of 1 and 5-year estimates based on population thresholds. The strength of the ACS is in estimating population and housing characteristics. The 2012 data provide key estimates for each of the topic areas covered by the ACS for the nation, all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, every congressional district, every metropolitan area, and all counties and places with populations of 65,000 or more. Although the ACS produces population, demographic and housing unit estimates,it is the Census Bureau's Population Estimates Program that produces and disseminates the official estimates of the population for the nation, states, counties, cities and towns, and estimates of housing units for states and counties. For 2010 and other decennial census years, the Decennial Census provides the official counts of population and housing units.

  14. g

    ACS 5-Year Data Profiles

    • gimi9.com
    Updated Nov 1, 2014
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    ACS 5-Year Data Profiles [Dataset]. https://gimi9.com/dataset/data-gov_acs-5-year-data-profiles-0901f/
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Nov 1, 2014
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The American Community Survey (ACS) is an ongoing survey that provides data every year -- giving communities the current information they need to plan investments and services. The ACS covers a broad range of topics about social, economic, housing, and demographic characteristics of the U.S. population. The ACS 5-year data profiles include the following geographies: nation, all states (including DC and Puerto Rico), all metropolitan areas, all congressional districts, all counties, all places and all tracts. The Data profiles contain broad social, economic, housing, and demographic information. The data are presented as both counts and percentages. There are over 2,400 variables in this dataset.

  15. c

    Sociodemographics - United States of America (Congressional District, 2007,...

    • carto.com
    Updated Mar 21, 2021
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    American Community Survey (2021). Sociodemographics - United States of America (Congressional District, 2007, yearly) [Dataset]. https://carto.com/spatial-data-catalog/browser/dataset/acs_sociodemogr_b924881e/
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 21, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    American Community Survey
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    The American Community Survey (ACS) is an ongoing survey that provides vital information on a yearly basis about the USA and its people. This dataset contains only a subset of the variables that have been deemed most relevant. More info: https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/acs/about.html

  16. a

    Congressional Districts 116th

    • arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Apr 10, 2020
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    ArcGIS Living Atlas Team (2020). Congressional Districts 116th [Dataset]. https://arc-gis-hub-home-arcgishub.hub.arcgis.com/datasets/arcgis-content::usa-particulate-matter-pm-2-5-between-1998-2016?layer=2
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 10, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    ArcGIS Living Atlas Team
    Area covered
    Description

    This layer shows particulate matter in the air sized 2.5 micrometers of smaller (PM 2.5). The data is aggregated from NASA Socioeconomic Data and Applications Center (SEDAC) gridded data into state, county, congressional district (116th) and 50 km hex bins. The unit of measurement is micrograms per cubic meter.The data is averaged for each year and over the the 19 years to provide an overall picture of air quality in the United States, including Puerto Rico. A space time cube was performed on a multidimensional mosaic version of the data in order to derive an emerging hot spot analysis. The county and state layers provide a population-weighted PM 2.5 value to emphasize which areas have a higher human impact. Each layer has been enriched with a set of 2019 US demographic attributes (excluding Puerto Rico) apportioned to the geography in order to map patterns alongside each other. Citations:van Donkelaar, A., R. V. Martin, M. Brauer, N. C. Hsu, R. A. Kahn, R. C. Levy, A. Lyapustin, A. M. Sayer, and D. M. Winker. 2018. Global Annual PM2.5 Grids from MODIS, MISR and SeaWiFS Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) with GWR, 1998-2016. Palisades, NY: NASA Socioeconomic Data and Applications Center (SEDAC). https://doi.org/10.7927/H4ZK5DQS. Accessed 1 April 2020van Donkelaar, A., R. V. Martin, M. Brauer, N. C. Hsu, R. A. Kahn, R. C. Levy, A. Lyapustin, A. M. Sayer, and D. M. Winker. 2016. Global Estimates of Fine Particulate Matter Using a Combined Geophysical-Statistical Method with Information from Satellites. Environmental Science & Technology 50 (7): 3762-3772. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5b05833.Boundaries:50km hex bins generated using the Generate Tessellation toolStates and counties come from 2018 TIGER boundaries with coastlines clipped116th Congressional Districts come from this ArcGIS Living Atlas layerData processing notes:NASA's GeoTIFF files for 19 years (1998-2016) were first brought into ArcGIS Pro 2.5.0 and put into a multidimensional mosaic dataset.For each geography level, the following was performed: Zonal Statistics were run against the mosaic as a multidimensional layer.A Space Time Cube was created to compare the 19 years of PM 2.5 values and detect hot/cold spot patterns. To learn more about Space Time Cubes, visit this page.The Space Time Cube is processed for Emerging Hot Spots where we gain the trends and hot spot results.The Enrich tool was run to add 2019 Esri demographic and 2014-2018 ACS attributes to the geographies. Attributes such as population, poverty, minority population, and others were added to the layer.To create the population-weighted attributes on the state and county layers, the hex value population values were used to create the weighting. Within each hex bin, the total population figure and average PM 2.5 were multiplied.The hex bins were converted into centroids and summarized within the state and county boundaries.The summation of these values were then divided by the total population of each state/county. This population value was determined by summarizing the population values from the hex bins within each geography.

  17. W

    U.S. House District Demographics (ACS 5-year)

    • wtfvote.us
    html
    Updated Jul 28, 2025
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    What The Vote (2025). U.S. House District Demographics (ACS 5-year) [Dataset]. https://wtfvote.us/demographics
    Explore at:
    htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 28, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    What The Vote
    License

    https://www.usa.gov/government-workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works

    Area covered
    United States
    Variables measured
    poverty rate, age distribution, sex distribution, educational attainment (HS+, BA+), household income (median / brackets)
    Measurement technique
    ACS 5-year estimates (latest available), Small-area aggregation to congressional districts
    Description

    District-level demographics (age, sex, education, household income, poverty) derived from U.S. Census Bureau ACS 5-year estimates. Searchable by ZIP, state, and district with on-page charts.

  18. undefined undefined: undefined | undefined (undefined)

    • data.census.gov
    + more versions
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    United States Census Bureau, undefined undefined: undefined | undefined (undefined) [Dataset]. https://data.census.gov/table?q=b16001&tid=ACSDT5Y2021.B16001
    Explore at:
    Dataset provided by
    United States Census Bureauhttp://census.gov/
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Although the American Community Survey (ACS) produces population, demographic and housing unit estimates, it is the Census Bureau's Population Estimates Program that produces and disseminates the official estimates of the population for the nation, states, counties, cities, and towns and estimates of housing units for states and counties..Supporting documentation on code lists, subject definitions, data accuracy, and statistical testing can be found on the American Community Survey website in the Technical Documentation section.Sample size and data quality measures (including coverage rates, allocation rates, and response rates) can be found on the American Community Survey website in the Methodology section..Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2017-2021 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates.Data are based on a sample and are subject to sampling variability. The degree of uncertainty for an estimate arising from sampling variability is represented through the use of a margin of error. The value shown here is the 90 percent margin of error. The margin of error can be interpreted roughly as providing a 90 percent probability that the interval defined by the estimate minus the margin of error and the estimate plus the margin of error (the lower and upper confidence bounds) contains the true value. In addition to sampling variability, the ACS estimates are subject to nonsampling error (for a discussion of nonsampling variability, see ACS Technical Documentation). The effect of nonsampling error is not represented in these tables..In 2016, changes were made to the languages and language categories presented in tables B16001, C16001, and B16002. For more information, see: 2016 Language Data User note..Geographical restrictions have been applied to Table B16001 - LANGUAGE SPOKEN AT HOME BY ABILITY TO SPEAK ENGLISH FOR THE POPULATION 5 YEARS AND OVER for the 5-year data estimates. These restrictions are in place to protect data privacy for the speakers of smaller languages. Geographic areas published for the 5-year B16001 table include: Nation (010), States (040), Metropolitan Statistical Area-Metropolitan Divisions (314), Combined Statistical Areas (330), Congressional Districts (500), and Public Use Microdata Sample Areas (PUMAs) (795). For more information on these geographical delineations, see the Metropolitan Statistical Area Reference Files. County and tract-level data are no longer available for table B16001; for specific language data for these smaller geographies, please use table C16001. Additional languages are also available in the Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS), at the State and Public Use Microdata Sample Area (PUMA) levels of geography..The 2017-2021 American Community Survey (ACS) data generally reflect the March 2020 Office of Management and Budget (OMB) delineations of metropolitan and micropolitan statistical areas. In certain instances, the names, codes, and boundaries of the principal cities shown in ACS tables may differ from the OMB delineation lists due to differences in the effective dates of the geographic entities..Estimates of urban and rural populations, housing units, and characteristics reflect boundaries of urban areas defined based on Census 2010 data. As a result, data for urban and rural areas from the ACS do not necessarily reflect the results of ongoing urbanization..Explanation of Symbols:- The estimate could not be computed because there were an insufficient number of sample observations. For a ratio of medians estimate, one or both of the median estimates falls in the lowest interval or highest interval of an open-ended distribution. For a 5-year median estimate, the margin of error associated with a median was larger than the median itself.N The estimate or margin of error cannot be displayed because there were an insufficient number of sample cases in the selected geographic area. (X) The estimate or margin of error is not applicable or not available.median- The median falls in the lowest interval of an open-ended distribution (for example "2,500-")median+ The median falls in the highest interval of an open-ended distribution (for example "250,000+").** The margin of error could not be computed because there were an insufficient number of sample observations.*** The margin of error could not be computed because the median falls in the lowest interval or highest interval of an open-ended distribution.***** A margin of error is not appropriate because the corresponding estimate is controlled to an independent population or housing estimate. Effectively, the corresponding estimate has no sampling error and the margin of error may be treated as zero.

  19. ACS Data Manifest 2023

    • opendata.atlantaregional.com
    • gisdata.fultoncountyga.gov
    • +1more
    Updated Feb 16, 2025
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    Georgia Association of Regional Commissions (2025). ACS Data Manifest 2023 [Dataset]. https://opendata.atlantaregional.com/documents/182e6fcf8201449086b95adf39471831
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 16, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    The Georgia Association of Regional Commissions
    Authors
    Georgia Association of Regional Commissions
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The Research & Analytics Department at the Atlanta Regional Commission published this Data Manifest for reference to ACS 2023 data release. This contains detail on ARC defined naming conventions, field names and aliases; source tables and notes and so forth for all metrics. See the ARC Census Data Directory for data layers: https://opendata.atlantaregional.com/pages/census-data-arcGeographiesAAA = Area Agency on Aging (12 geographic units formed from counties providing statewide coverage)ARC21 = Atlanta Regional Commission modeling area (21 counties merged to a single geographic unit)ARWDB7 = Atlanta Regional Workforce Development Board (7 counties merged to a single geographic unit)BeltLineStatistical (buffer)BeltLineStatisticalSub (subareas)Census Tract (statewide)CFGA23 = Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta (23 counties merged to a single geographic unit)City (statewide)City of Atlanta Council Districts (City of Atlanta)City of Atlanta Neighborhood Planning Unit (City of Atlanta)City of Atlanta Neighborhood Statistical Areas (City of Atlanta)County (statewide)County Commission Districts (statewide where applicable)County Commission Superdistricts (DeKalb)Georgia House (statewide)Georgia Senate (statewide)HSSA = High School Statistical Area (11 county region)MetroWater15 = Atlanta Metropolitan Water District (15 counties merged to a single geographic unit)Regional Commissions (statewide)State of Georgia (single geographic unit)Superdistrict (ARC region)US Congress (statewide)UWGA13 = United Way of Greater Atlanta (13 counties merged to a single geographic unit)ZIP Code Tabulation Areas (statewide)The user should note that American Community Survey data represent estimates derived from a surveyed sample of the population, which creates some level of uncertainty, as opposed to an exact measure of the entire population (the full census count is only conducted once every 10 years and does not cover as many detailed characteristics of the population). Therefore, any measure reported by ACS should not be taken as an exact number – this is why a corresponding margin of error (MOE) is also given for ACS measures. The size of the MOE relative to its corresponding estimate value provides an indication of confidence in the accuracy of each estimate. Each MOE is expressed in the same units as its corresponding measure; for example, if the estimate value is expressed as a number, then its MOE will also be a number; if the estimate value is expressed as a percent, then its MOE will also be a percent. The user should also note that for relatively small geographic areas, such as census tracts shown here, ACS only releases combined 5-year estimates, meaning these estimates represent rolling averages of survey results that were collected over a 5-year span (in this case 2019-2023). Therefore, these data do not represent any one specific point in time or even one specific year. For geographic areas with larger populations, 3-year and 1-year estimates are also available. For further explanation of ACS estimates and margin of error, visit Census ACS website.Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Atlanta Regional CommissionDate: 2019-2023Data License: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC by 4.0)

  20. g

    ACS 1-Year Detailed Tables | gimi9.com

    • gimi9.com
    Updated Sep 16, 2016
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    (2016). ACS 1-Year Detailed Tables | gimi9.com [Dataset]. https://gimi9.com/dataset/data-gov_acs-1-year-detailed-tables-6fd62/
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 16, 2016
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The American Community Survey (ACS) is an ongoing survey that provides data every year -- giving communities the current information they need to plan investments and services. The ACS covers a broad range of topics about social, economic, demographic, and housing characteristics of the U.S. population. Much of the ACS data provided on the Census Bureau's Web site are available separately by age group, race, Hispanic origin, and sex. Summary files, Subject tables, Data profiles, and Comparison profiles are available for the nation, all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, every congressional district, every metropolitan area, and all counties and places with populations of 65,000 or more. Detailed Tables contain the most detailed cross-tabulations published for areas 65k and more. The data are population counts. There are over 31,000 variables in this dataset.

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What The Vote (2021). ACS Demographics by Congressional District (5-year) [Dataset]. https://wtfvote.us/

ACS Demographics by Congressional District (5-year)

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htmlAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
Jul 8, 2021
Dataset authored and provided by
What The Vote
License

https://www.usa.gov/government-workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works

Area covered
United States
Description

Census Bureau ACS 5-year estimates aggregated to congressional districts and states, used for charts and profiles on WTFVote.

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