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The projections are based upon actual values obtained in 2015, and estimates obtained for 2016. A full list of all projections, including historical projections, can be found at http://apps.treasury.act.gov.au/demography/projections/act.
These population projections are not intended to present predictions of the demographic future to any degree of reliability or precision.
The population projections contained here are the projected population resulting from certain assumptions about future trends in fertility, mortality and migration trends.
Future population trends are influenced by a variety of social, economic and political factors, with significant fluctuation in short-term population growth rates as well as in the underlying social, economic and political influencers. Numerous behavioural assumptions are required to be made for each age cohort and sex. Many of these assumptions will be swamped by the random impacts on the future movements of individuals through births, deaths, and relocation.
Neither the authors nor the ACT Government give warranty in relation to these projections, and no liability is accepted by the authors or the Government or any other person who assisted in the preparation of the publication, for errors and omissions, loss or damage suffered as a result of any person acting in reliance thereon.
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ACT population born overseas comparison of years The data is presented by the ACT Government for the purpose of disseminating information for the benefit of the public. The ACT Government has taken …Show full descriptionACT population born overseas comparison of years The data is presented by the ACT Government for the purpose of disseminating information for the benefit of the public. The ACT Government has taken great care to ensure the information in this report is as correct and accurate as possible. Whilst the information is considered to be true and correct at the date of publication, changes in circumstances after the time of publication may impact on the accuracy of the information. Differences in statistical methods and calculations, data updates and guidelines may result in the information contained in this report varying from previously published information.
The projections are based upon actual values obtained in 2015, and estimates obtained for 2016. A full list of all projections, including historical projections, can be found at http://apps.treasury.act.gov.au/demography/projections/act. These population projections are not intended to present predictions of the demographic future to any degree of reliability or precision. The population projections contained here are the projected population resulting from certain assumptions about future trends in fertility, mortality and migration trends. Future population trends are influenced by a variety of social, economic and political factors, with significant fluctuation in short-term population growth rates as well as in the underlying social, economic and political influencers. Numerous behavioural assumptions are required to be made for each age cohort and sex. Many of these assumptions will be swamped by the random impacts on the future movements of individuals through births, deaths, and relocation. Neither the authors nor the ACT Government give warranty in relation to these projections, and no liability is accepted by the authors or the Government or any other person who assisted in the preparation of the publication, for errors and omissions, loss or damage suffered as a result of any person acting in reliance thereon.
The projections are based upon actual values obtained in 2015, and estimates obtained for 2016. A full list of all projections, including historical projections, can be found at http://apps.treasury.act.gov.au/demography/projections/act. These population projections are not intended to present predictions of the demographic future to any degree of reliability or precision. The population projections contained here are the projected population resulting from certain assumptions about future trends in fertility, mortality and migration trends. Future population trends are influenced by a variety of social, economic and political factors, with significant fluctuation in short-term population growth rates as well as in the underlying social, economic and political influencers. Numerous behavioural assumptions are required to be made for each age cohort and sex. Many of these assumptions will be swamped by the random impacts on the future movements of individuals through births, deaths, and relocation. Neither the authors nor the ACT Government give warranty in relation to these projections, and no liability is accepted by the authors or the Government or any other person who assisted in the preparation of the publication, for errors and omissions, loss or damage suffered as a result of any person acting in reliance thereon.
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ACT Estimated resident population by statistical area(SA2 and SA3) The data is presented by the ACT Government for the purpose of disseminating information for the benefit of the public. The ACT …Show full descriptionACT Estimated resident population by statistical area(SA2 and SA3) The data is presented by the ACT Government for the purpose of disseminating information for the benefit of the public. The ACT Government has taken great care to ensure the information in this report is as correct and accurate as possible. Whilst the information is considered to be true and correct at the date of publication, changes in circumstances after the time of publication may impact on the accuracy of the information. Differences in statistical methods and calculations, data updates and guidelines may result in the information contained in this report varying from previously published information
As of June 2023, in the Australian Capital Territory, about 8.9percent of the population was between 30 and 34 years old. In comparison, just 1.6 percent of the population was over the age of 85.
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Estimated Resident Population ACT and Australia 2014
The data is presented by the ACT Government for the purpose of disseminating information for the benefit of the public. The ACT Government has taken great care to ensure the information in this report is as correct and accurate as possible. Whilst the information is considered to be true and correct at the date of publication, changes in circumstances after the time of publication may impact on the accuracy of the information. Differences in statistical methods and calculations, data updates and guidelines may result in the information contained in this report varying from previously published information.
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Number and proportion (%) of estimated district population, by age group in the ACT, June 2016. Source: ABS 2016, Population by Age and Sex, Regions of Australia, ‘Population Estimates by Age and Sex, Regions of Australian Capital Territory (AGS 2016)’, ‘Table 6. Estimated Resident Population by Age, Australian Capital Territory, Persons — 30 June 2016’, time series spreadsheet, cat. no. 3235.0, viewed 1 June 2016. Number and proportion (%) of estimated district population, by age group in the ACT, June 2016. Source: ABS 2016, Population by Age and Sex, Regions of Australia, ‘Population Estimates by Age and Sex, Regions of Australian Capital Territory (AGS 2016)’, ‘Table 6. Estimated Resident Population by Age, Australian Capital Territory, Persons — 30 June 2016’, time series spreadsheet, cat. no. 3235.0, viewed 1 June 2016.
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Estimated resident population by ACT town centre (Statistical Area 3)
The data is presented by the ACT Government for the purpose of disseminating information for the benefit of the public. The ACT Government has taken great care to ensure the information in this report is as correct and accurate as possible. Whilst the information is considered to be true and correct at the date of publication, changes in circumstances after the time of publication may impact on the accuracy of the information. Differences in statistical methods and calculations, data updates and guidelines may result in the information contained in this report varying from previously published information.
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Proportion (%) of estimated ACT resident population, by age group, June 2016. Source: ABS 2016 Census data. Proportion (%) of estimated ACT resident population, by age group, June 2016. Source: ABS 2016 Census data.
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Estimated resident population, ACT, by age and sex, 0–24 years, 30 June 2014 and 2016.
Source: ABS 2016, Population by Age and Sex, Regions of Australia, ‘Population Estimates by Age and Sex, Regions of Australian Capital Territory (AGS 2016)’, ‘Table 4. Estimated Resident Population by Age, Australian Capital Territory, Males — 30 June 2016’ and ‘Table 5. Estimated Resident Population by Age, Australian Capital Territory, Females — 30 June 2016’, time series spreadsheet, cat. no. 3235.0, viewed 1 June 2016.
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Increase and decrease in population 2000-2016 (Lorraine: 1999-2015) Average annual growth rate of the population 2000-2016 (Lorraine: 1999-2015) Territorial entities: Cantons (LOR, LUX), Kreise (RLP, SL), arrondissements (WAL) Statistical data sources: INSEE Grand Est, Statistisches Landesamt Rheinland-Pfalz, Statistisches Amt Saarland, STATEC, IWEPS. Calculations: LISER 2018 Geodata sources: ACT Luxembourg 2017, IGN France 2017, GeoBasis-DE / BKG 2017, NGI-Belgium 2017. Harmonization: SIG-GR / GIS-GR 2018
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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Population data refers to the number of active employees in organizations under the exclusive appointment authority of the Public Service Commission (PSC) (employees of organizations named in the Financial Administration Act — Schedule I, most of Schedule IV and some agencies in Schedule V). This differs from numbers reported by the Treasury Board Secretariat (TBS) that reflect employment in organizations under the Public Service Staff Relations Act. In addition, a number of separate agencies are subject to Part 7 of the Public Service Employment Act (PSEA), which administers the political activities of public servants. The population count represents the number of active employees at a specific point in time. Population data are derived from the TBS Incumbent File. This file is extracted from the Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC) pay system.
This dataset lists the total population 18 years and older by census block in Connecticut before and after population adjustments were made pursuant to Public Act 21-13. PA 21-13 creates a process to adjust the U.S. Census Bureau population data to allow for most individuals who are incarcerated to be counted at their address before incarceration. Prior to enactment of the act, these inmates were counted at their correctional facility address. The act requires the CT Office of Policy and Management (OPM) to prepare and publish the adjusted and unadjusted data by July 1 in the year after the U.S. census is taken or 30 days after the U.S. Census Bureau’s publication of the state’s data. A report documenting the population adjustment process was prepared by a team at OPM composed of the Criminal Justice Policy and Planning Division (OPM CJPPD) and the Data and Policy Analytics (DAPA) unit. The report is available here: https://portal.ct.gov/-/media/OPM/CJPPD/CjAbout/SAC-Documents-from-2021-2022/PA21-13_OPM_Summary_Report_20210921.pdf Note: On September 21, 2021, following the initial publication of the report, OPM and DOC revised the count of juveniles, reallocating 65 eighteen-year-old individuals who were incorrectly designated as being under age 18. After the DOC released the updated data to OPM, the report and this dataset were updated to reflect the revision.
Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) - Census of Population and Housing General Community Profile
Method of travel to work
Please note that there are small random adjustments have been made to all cell values to protect the confidentiality of data. These adjustments may cause the sum of rows or columns to differ by small amounts from table totals.
The data is presented by the ACT Government for the purpose of disseminating information for the benefit of the public. The ACT Government has taken great care to ensure the information in this report is as correct and accurate as possible. Whilst the information is considered to be true and correct at the date of publication, changes in circumstances after the time of publication may impact on the accuracy of the information. Differences in statistical methods and calculations, data updates and guidelines may result in the information contained in this report varying from previously published information.
https://dataverse.ada.edu.au/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/2.0/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.26193/ZEAYUDhttps://dataverse.ada.edu.au/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/2.0/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.26193/ZEAYUD
In this omnibus survey, topics investigated were dwelling and household characteristics; occurrence of disability in household members; employment history and conditions; life satisfaction; attitudes to and knowledge and personal experience of cancer; opinions on political leaders, the world economy, ACT self-government, and marijuana and its legalisation. Voting intentions in a federal election and the use of alcohol, tobacco and drugs, including patent medicines, were also examined. The drug questions were asked using a randomised response technique. Background variables are age, sex, marital status, birthplace, and residence in Australia for the workforce data, and educational level and income for the individual data.
Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) - Census of Population and Housing General Community Profile
Method of travel to work
Please note that there are small random adjustments have been made to all cell values to protect the confidentiality of data. These adjustments may cause the sum of rows or columns to differ by small amounts from table totals.
The data is presented by the ACT Government for the purpose of disseminating information for the benefit of the public. The ACT Government has taken great care to ensure the information in this report is as correct and accurate as possible. Whilst the information is considered to be true and correct at the date of publication, changes in circumstances after the time of publication may impact on the accuracy of the information. Differences in statistical methods and calculations, data updates and guidelines may result in the information contained in this report varying from previously published information.
This spreadsheet replicates selected data tables from the ACT & Queanbeyan Household Travel Survey dashboard. Please refer to the attached spreadsheet on this page. About the Origins and Destinations of Travel theme This theme studies the origins and destinations of trips (regardless of where people live). Trips back home are not always included in origin-destination tables and local area catchment analyses. This is to highlight the places that people travel to for specific activities (rather than just 'returning home' - a fixed destination with no choice). Data with and without the home trips included are provided in two separate tabs. Geographical notes: - In this theme, areas not directly surveyed are still shown. This reflects a change in emphasis compared to other dashboard tables, from where people live to where people travel. For example, while no households from Canberra East were sampled as part of the survey, travel to and from this area was still made by other participants. - Travel to and from 'outside the study area' is shown as a potential location. Again, this only relates to survey participants and not the travel of external visitors to the study area. - Plane travel into or out of the study area is excluded. From a household travel perspective, plane travel accounts for under half a percentage point of all daily trips. Source data The data shown is not a Census of travel, but a large survey of several thousand households from across the ACT and Queanbeyan. As with any survey there will be some variability in the accuracy of the results, and how well they reflect the movement of the entire population. For instance, if the survey were to be completed on another day, or with a different subset of households, the results would be slightly different. Interpretations of the data should keep this variability in mind: these are estimates of the broad shape of travel only. Even for the same person, travel behaviour will vary according to many factors: day of week, month of year, season, weather, school holidays, illness, family responsibilities, work from home opportunities, etc. Again, by summarising the travel of many different people, the data provides a view of average weekday patterns. In interpreting the data, it is worth noting the following points: - A zero cell does not necessarily mean the travel is never made, but rather that the survey participants did not make this travel on their particular survey day. - Values are rounded, and may not sum to the totals shown. Trip time periods are assigned using the mid point of travel: - AM peak (8am to 9am), PM peak (5pm to 6pm), Interpeak (9am to 5pm), Off-peak (after 6pm) Cell annotations and notes Some cells have annotations added to them, as follows: * : Statistically significant difference across survey years (at the 95% confidence level). Confidence intervals indicate where the true measure would typically fall if the survey were repeated multiple times (i.e., 95 times out of 100), recognising that each survey iteration may produce slightly different outcomes. ~ : Unreliable estimate (small sample or wide confidence interval) The survey is described on the Transport Canberra and City Services' website: [Household Travel Survey homepage] Additional information Analysis by Sift Research, March 2025. Contact research@sift.group for further information. Enclosed data tables shared under a 'CC BY' Creative Commons licence. This enables users to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to the creator. The license allows for commercial use. [>More information about CC BY]
Public Law 94-171, enacted in 1975, requires the Census Bureau to provide redistricting data in a format requested by state governments. Within one year following the 1990 decennial Census (by April 1, 1991), the Census Bureau provided the governor and legislature of each state with the population data needed to redraw legislative districts. This collection contains the same substantive and geographic variables as the original Public Law 94-171 files [see CENSUS OF POPULATION AND HOUSING, 1990 [UNITED STATES]: PUBLIC LAW (P.L.) 94-171 DATA (ICPSR 9516)] but with the population counts adjusted for undernumeration. Adjusted Public Law 94-171 counts are supplied for a sample of one-half of blocks in the United States and a complete selection of areas with 1,000 or more persons. Each state file provides data for the state and its subareas in the following order: state, county, voting district, county subdivision, place, and block. Additionally, complete summaries are provided for the following geographic areas: county subdivision, place, consolidated city, state portion of American Indian and Alaska Native area, and county portion of American Indian and Alaska Native area. Area characteristics such as land area, water area, latitude, and longitude are provided. Summary statistics are provided for all persons, for persons 18 years old and over, and for housing units in the geographic areas. Counts by race and by Hispanic and non-Hispanic origin are also recorded.
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Proportion (%) of the estimated resident population who were aged 0–24 years in each Australian state and territory, as of June 2016.
Source: ABS, Population by Age and Sex, Regions of Australia, 2016.
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License information was derived automatically
The projections are based upon actual values obtained in 2015, and estimates obtained for 2016. A full list of all projections, including historical projections, can be found at http://apps.treasury.act.gov.au/demography/projections/act.
These population projections are not intended to present predictions of the demographic future to any degree of reliability or precision.
The population projections contained here are the projected population resulting from certain assumptions about future trends in fertility, mortality and migration trends.
Future population trends are influenced by a variety of social, economic and political factors, with significant fluctuation in short-term population growth rates as well as in the underlying social, economic and political influencers. Numerous behavioural assumptions are required to be made for each age cohort and sex. Many of these assumptions will be swamped by the random impacts on the future movements of individuals through births, deaths, and relocation.
Neither the authors nor the ACT Government give warranty in relation to these projections, and no liability is accepted by the authors or the Government or any other person who assisted in the preparation of the publication, for errors and omissions, loss or damage suffered as a result of any person acting in reliance thereon.