The number of inhabitants living in Campeche amounted to approximately 950,500 in 2022. This represents an increase in comparison to the amount reported in 2020. The state of Campeche is one of the least populated regions in Mexico.
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Mexico Population: Campeche data was reported at 958.852 Person th in 2018. This records an increase from the previous number of 941.956 Person th for 2017. Mexico Population: Campeche data is updated yearly, averaging 617.379 Person th from Dec 1970 (Median) to 2018, with 49 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 958.852 Person th in 2018 and a record low of 262.217 Person th in 1970. Mexico Population: Campeche data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by National Population Council. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Mexico – Table MX.G002: Population: by State.
As of 2020, the Mexican state of Campeche accommodated a population of approximately ******* inhabitants. The gender distribution among the residents was relatively equal, with women comprising ****% and men making up ****% of the total population.
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Mexico Population: Male: Campeche data was reported at 473.756 Person th in 2018. This records an increase from the previous number of 465.318 Person th for 2017. Mexico Population: Male: Campeche data is updated yearly, averaging 311.220 Person th from Dec 1970 (Median) to 2018, with 49 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 473.756 Person th in 2018 and a record low of 132.150 Person th in 1970. Mexico Population: Male: Campeche data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by National Population Council. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Mexico – Table MX.G002: Population: by State.
In 2020, the population in non-family households in Campeche amounted to about ****** people. Between 2000 and 2020, the population rose by approximately ****** people.
The rate per 100,000 inhabitants who heard from acquaintances about corruption in Campeche stood at approximately ****** in 2023. Between 2013 and 2023, the rate rose by around ******, though the increase followed an uneven trajectory rather than a consistent upward trend.
4,77,987 (Persons) in 2018. All the people who reside in the country at the time of the interview, whether domestic or foreign. It includes Mexican diplomats functioning overseas and family members residing with them, those who cross the border daily to work in another country, and homeless population. Do not include foreigners who do office or diplomatic work in the country or their families. Until 1900 Quintana Roo was included in Yucatan, Baja California Sur was included in Baja California. Figures for the following census dates: October 20 (1895), October 28 (1900), October 27 (1910), November 30 (1920), May 15 (1930), March 6 (1940), June 6 (1950), June 8 (1960), January 28 (1970), June 4 (1980), March 12 (1990), November 5 (1995), February 14 (2000), 19 October (2005) and June 12 (2010).
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Mexico Average Years in School: Population: 15 Years & Above: Female: Campeche data was reported at 9.520 Year in 2020. This records an increase from the previous number of 8.940 Year for 2015. Mexico Average Years in School: Population: 15 Years & Above: Female: Campeche data is updated yearly, averaging 8.630 Year from Dec 2000 (Median) to 2020, with 4 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 9.520 Year in 2020 and a record low of 6.710 Year in 2000. Mexico Average Years in School: Population: 15 Years & Above: Female: Campeche data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by National Institute of Statistics and Geography. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Mexico – Table MX.G016: Education Statistics: Age 15 and Above.
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state of Campeche. name, type, Area, capital city, Country, continent, population
0,62 (%) in 2017. zero represents- the lowest income per capita, lowest educational attainment, and highest TFR observed across all GBD geographies from 1970 to 2016, and one represents the highest income per capita, highest educational attainment, and lowest TFR.
38.8 (Percent) in 2022. The number of people aged 0-14 per hundred economically productive population (15-64 years). The calculation excludes unspecified age group. Figures for the following census dates: February 14 (2000), 17 October (2005) and June 12 (2010).
2,0 (Percent) in 2010. All the people who reside in the country at the time of the interview, whether domestic or foreign. It includes Mexican diplomats functioning overseas and family members residing with them, those who cross the border daily to work in another country, and homeless population. Do not include foreigners who do office or diplomatic work in the country or their families. Until 1900 Quintana Roo was included in Yucatan, Baja California Sur was included in Baja California. Figures for the following census dates: October 20 (1895), October 28 (1900), October 27 (1910), November 30 (1920), May 15 (1930), March 6 (1940), June 6 (1950), June 8 (1960), January 28 (1970), June 4 (1980), March 12 (1990), November 5 (1995), February 14 (2000), 19 October (2005) and June 12 (2010).
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人口:女性:坎佩切在12-01-2018达485.096千人,相较于12-01-2017的476.638千人有所增长。人口:女性:坎佩切数据按年更新,12-01-1970至12-01-2018期间平均值为306.159千人,共49份观测结果。该数据的历史最高值出现于12-01-2018,达485.096千人,而历史最低值则出现于12-01-1970,为130.067千人。CEIC提供的人口:女性:坎佩切数据处于定期更新的状态,数据来源于Consejo Nacional de Poblacion,数据归类于全球数据库的墨西哥 – 表 MX.G002:人口:按州划分。
78,4 (years) in 2024. Age that divides the population into two numerically equal parts, i.e. the age which collects 50% of the population. Figures for the following census dates: February 14 (2000), 17 October (2005) and June 12 (2010).
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Results from Bottleneck analysis of Gulf of Mexico microsatellite data.
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Original provider: Eduardo Cuevas
Dataset credits: Data provider Grupo de trabajo para la tortuga carey (Mexico) Originating data center Satellite Tracking and Analysis Tool (STAT) Project partner This study represents a collaboration between the Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnologia (UNAM), ProNatura Peninsula de Yucatan, Comision Nacional de Areas Naturales Protegidas (SEMARNAT), Laguna de Terminos- Area de Proteccion de Flora y Fauna, Chelonia Inc (Puerto Rico), and NOAA. Project sponsor or sponsor description This project (CAMP-2005-C01-046) is financed jointly by the Campeche State Government and the Mexican National Science and Technology Council (CONACYT). Further support from NOAA, which we thankfully acknowledge, has permitted us to extend the scope of the initial project.
Abstract:
The hawksbill population that nests in the Yucatan Peninsula (Mexico) is considered the largest in the Atlantic and one of the four largest in the world. However, from about 6,400 registered annual number of nests in 1999 (when the Mexican population represented about 43% of all recorded hawksbill nests in the Greater Caribbean), the population's reproductive output dropped to less than 2,400 nests/yr by 2004. No single cause has been demonstrated but as major nesting sites are under protection this alarming decline (a drop of 63% in 5 years) is suspected to be associated with threats impacting the species at foraging grounds or migratory routes. Unfortunately not only has there been no capacity to study and protect these habitats but, with the exception of studies by Byles and Swimmer (1994) and Garduño et al. (2003), there is also insufficient information on the routes taken and foraging destinations for the various rookeries in the region. To address these issues, the current satellite tracking project was instrumented to reveal the post-nesting migratory behavior of hawksbills in the Yucatan Peninsula, starting in 2006 with animals nesting in Campeche State, where about 50% of the reproductive output by the species in the whole Peninsula is concentrated.
Knowledge on the migratory routes and foraging sites will be helpful in identifying and mitigating potential threats in the marine habitats and for the establishment of research programs on the status of the habitats themselves. Furthermore, discovering whether or not these lie within or outside Mexican territorial waters has important consequences for the management strategies. If they are inside, the responsibility for addressing the hawksbills' conservation needs is totally Mexico's. If, on the other hand, some or all of the turtles cross into international waters or into other countries' jurisdictions it would indicate an internationally shared responsibility.
Future studies by the group will be directed towards tracking hawksbills nesting in the two other sates using similar techniques and learning from the lessons obtained from this season's experience.
Literature cited
Byles, R. A. and Swimmer, Y. B. 1994. Post-nesting migration of Eretmocheyls imbricata in the Yucatán Península. In: K. A. Bjorndal, A. B. Bolten, D. A. Johnson and P. J. Eliazar (compilers). 1994. Proc. Fourteenth Ann. Symp. Sea Turtle Biol. and Cons. NMFS-SEFSC-351. p. 202.
Garduño-Andrade, M., Schroeder, B. Balazs, G. and Lope, R. 2003. Migration and dive behavior of female hawksbills (Eretmochelys imbricata) in the Yucatan Peninsula. In: Seminoff, J. A. Compiler, Proceedings of the Twenty-Second Annual Symposium on Sea Turtle Biology and Conservation. NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-SEFSC-503, p. 285
The World Values Survey (www.worldvaluessurvey.org) is a global network of social scientists studying changing values and their impact on social and political life, led by an international team of scholars, with the WVS association and secretariat headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden.
The survey, which started in 1981, seeks to use the most rigorous, high-quality research designs in each country. The WVS consists of nationally representative surveys conducted in almost 100 countries which contain almost 90 percent of the world’s population, using a common questionnaire. The WVS is the largest non-commercial, cross-national, time series investigation of human beliefs and values ever executed, currently including interviews with almost 400,000 respondents. Moreover the WVS is the only academic study covering the full range of global variations, from very poor to very rich countries, in all of the world’s major cultural zones.
The WVS seeks to help scientists and policy makers understand changes in the beliefs, values and motivations of people throughout the world. Thousands of political scientists, sociologists, social psychologists, anthropologists and economists have used these data to analyze such topics as economic development, democratization, religion, gender equality, social capital, and subjective well-being. These data have also been widely used by government officials, journalists and students, and groups at the World Bank have analyzed the linkages between cultural factors and economic development.
National
Household Individual
National Population, Both sexes,18 and more years.
Sample survey data [ssd]
Sample size: 1531
The sample framework departs from the list of cities over 50,000 inhabitants. The country was divided in four great regions: Metropolitan Zone (ZM), North (N), Center (C) and South (S). Two states take part in the ZM (Distrito Federal and Mexico); 16 states in the zone N (Jalisco, Nuevo León, Guanajuato, Coahuila, Chihuahua, Aguascalientes, Sonora, Durango, Nayarit, Zacateras, Colima and Baja California Sur). The zone C is formed by 6 states (Michoacan, Guerrero, Queretaro, Morelos, Hidalgo and Tlaxcala); and, finally, in the zone S were considered 8 states (Puebla, Yucatan, Veracruz, Tabasco, Chiapas, Campeche Oaxaca and Quintana Roo). The ZM’s population is 18.7 millions (22.2%) and it has 93% of urban population. The C’s population is 13.6 millions (16.1%) with 45% urban. The zone S has 20.2 millions (24%) with 38% urban; and the N’s population is 31.7 millions (37.7%) with 64% urban. Countrie’s estimated total population is 84.287 millions, 72% urban and 28% rural. There are 73 cities in the list, but only 42 cities were randomly selected in the sample. These cities have the number of starting points according to the total population divided for the total number of cities to have an interval. For each starting point were applied 20 questionnaires. So, cities with one, two or three starting points have 20, 40 or 60 questionnaires taken. The additional numbers of interviews in the Mexico City area (+85) come from an over-sampling of 160 questionnaires that we took in order to have a closer view of the city for our local questions (Q745-753). Those questionnaires are identified by numbers over the 1500 ‘folio’. Those 160 questionnaires are included in the tape. In sum the sample was taken from a list of 73 cities with population larger than 50,000 and 42 cities were chosen: 5 from the ZM zone, 7 from C, 11 from S and 19 from N. There were 75 starting points, and so 1500 questionnaires. The total urban population is 72% and 28% rural, proportionately, surveyed.
Face-to-face [f2f]
For each wave, suggestions for questions are solicited by social scientists from all over the world and a final master questionnaire is developed in English. Since the start in 1981 each successive wave has covered a broader range of societies than the previous one. Analysis of the data from each wave has indicated that certain questions tapped interesting and important concepts while others were of little value. This has led to the more useful questions or themes being replicated in future waves while the less useful ones have been dropped making room for new questions.
The questionnaire is translated into the various national languages and in many cases independently translated back to English to check the accuracy of the translation. In most countries, the translated questionnaire is pre-tested to help identify questions for which the translation is problematic. In some cases certain problematic questions are omitted from the national questionnaire.
WVS requires implementation of the common questionnaire fully and faithfully, in all countries included into one wave. Any alteration to the original questionnaire has to be approved by the EC. Omission of no more than a maximum of 12 questions in any given country can be allowed.
Estimated error: 2.6
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Original provider: Eduardo Cuevas
Dataset credits: Data provider Grupo de trabajo para la tortuga carey (Mexico) Originating data center Satellite Tracking and Analysis Tool (STAT) Project partner This study represents a collaboration between the Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnologia (UNAM), ProNatura Peninsula de Yucatan, Comision Nacional de Areas Naturales Protegidas (SEMARNAT), Laguna de Terminos- Area de Proteccion de Flora y Fauna, Chelonia Inc (Puerto Rico), and NOAA. Project sponsor or sponsor description This project (CAMP-2005-C01-046) is financed jointly by the Campeche State Government and the Mexican National Science and Technology Council (CONACYT). Further support from NOAA, which we thankfully acknowledge, has permitted us to extend the scope of the initial project.
Abstract:
The hawksbill population that nests in the Yucatan Peninsula (Mexico) is considered the largest in the Atlantic and one of the four largest in the world. However, from about 6,400 registered annual number of nests in 1999 (when the Mexican population represented about 43% of all recorded hawksbill nests in the Greater Caribbean), the population's reproductive output dropped to less than 2,400 nests/yr by 2004. No single cause has been demonstrated but as major nesting sites are under protection this alarming decline (a drop of 63% in 5 years) is suspected to be associated with threats impacting the species at foraging grounds or migratory routes. Unfortunately not only has there been no capacity to study and protect these habitats but, with the exception of studies by Byles and Swimmer (1994) and Garduño et al. (2003), there is also insufficient information on the routes taken and foraging destinations for the various rookeries in the region. To address these issues, the current satellite tracking project was instrumented to reveal the post-nesting migratory behavior of hawksbills in the Yucatan Peninsula, starting in 2006 with animals nesting in Campeche State, where about 50% of the reproductive output by the species in the whole Peninsula is concentrated.
Knowledge on the migratory routes and foraging sites will be helpful in identifying and mitigating potential threats in the marine habitats and for the establishment of research programs on the status of the habitats themselves. Furthermore, discovering whether or not these lie within or outside Mexican territorial waters has important consequences for the management strategies. If they are inside, the responsibility for addressing the hawksbills' conservation needs is totally Mexico's. If, on the other hand, some or all of the turtles cross into international waters or into other countries' jurisdictions it would indicate an internationally shared responsibility.
Future studies by the group will be directed towards tracking hawksbills nesting in the two other sates using similar techniques and learning from the lessons obtained from this season's experience.
Literature cited
Byles, R. A. and Swimmer, Y. B. 1994. Post-nesting migration of Eretmocheyls imbricata in the Yucatán Península. In: K. A. Bjorndal, A. B. Bolten, D. A. Johnson and P. J. Eliazar (compilers). 1994. Proc. Fourteenth Ann. Symp. Sea Turtle Biol. and Cons. NMFS-SEFSC-351. p. 202.
Garduño-Andrade, M., Schroeder, B. Balazs, G. and Lope, R. 2003. Migration and dive behavior of female hawksbills (Eretmochelys imbricata) in the Yucatan Peninsula. In: Seminoff, J. A. Compiler, Proceedings of the Twenty-Second Annual Symposium on Sea Turtle Biology and Conservation. NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-SEFSC-503, p. 285
Supplemental information: Visit STAT's project page for additional information.
This dataset is a summarized representation of the telemetry locations aggregated per species per 1-degree cell.
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Mexico Number of Immigrants: Campeche data was reported at 3.482 Person th in 2015. This records a decrease from the previous number of 4.971 Person th for 2010. Mexico Number of Immigrants: Campeche data is updated yearly, averaging 1.367 Person th from Dec 1975 (Median) to 2015, with 9 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 4.971 Person th in 2010 and a record low of 0.108 Person th in 1975. Mexico Number of Immigrants: Campeche data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by National Population Council. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Mexico – Table MX.G008: Number of Immigrants.
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Original provider: Guzmán-Hernández, V., Rivas-Hernández, G., García-Alvarado, P.A., Huerta-Rodríguez, P., Peralta-Jiménez, X.
Dataset credits: Guzmán-Hernández, V., Rivas-Hernández, G., García-Alvarado, P.A., Huerta- Rodríguez, P., Peralta-Jiménez, X.
Abstract: The long-term recording of stranded and dead sea turtle individuals in those critical habitats is crucial for management and restoration action planning. In Mexico, some multiple-year operating conservation programs count with a long-term sea turtle mortality database, as in Campeche, Mexico, where some of the largest hawksbill nesting populations in the West Atlantic reside. This dataset is a historic reference baseline about the spatiotemporal mortality patterns of the imperiled sea turtle species in the southeastern Gulf of Mexico, showing their interactions with anthropogenic activities and circumstances that jeopardize their population recovery.
The number of inhabitants living in Campeche amounted to approximately 950,500 in 2022. This represents an increase in comparison to the amount reported in 2020. The state of Campeche is one of the least populated regions in Mexico.