22 datasets found
  1. e

    Mikrocensus 1981, 2. quarter: Additional Questions for the Population Census...

    • b2find.eudat.eu
    Updated Feb 20, 2024
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    (2024). Mikrocensus 1981, 2. quarter: Additional Questions for the Population Census 1981 - Dataset - B2FIND [Dataset]. https://b2find.eudat.eu/dataset/433467b1-f78f-562a-aae6-10bf5584b9bb
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 20, 2024
    Description

    This survey consists of 6 parts: - migration: data on migration, i.e. immigration and emigration of households or individual; this information is important for population forecasts and the evaluation of the development of the individual geographic area - handicaps: reasons for including questions on this topic are the “year of handicapped persons” (1981), proclaimed by the UN and paying attentions to these questions from a statistical point of view; the questions had already been posed in September 1987 (Mikrozensus MZ7803) - additional occupation: these questions should give information on additional occupation of employed and unemployed persons; of course the Mikrozensus can only document legal additional occupation, not illegal employment - social stratification: questions on occupational stratum and the receiving of benefit payments serve the in-depth analysis of the other questions - income: the currently available income data in Austria do not allow the representation of the population according to the total income of one person and according to the income of the household; a detailed income survey is not possible in the Mikrozensus: the question program on income is limited to a single question and self-employed, as well as persons helping in the family business are not interviewed. - birth-biography and desire to have children: these questions were for the most part already posed in June 1967 (Mikrozensus MZ7602).

  2. c

    Attitude to the Census (Panel: First wave, April - May 1987)

    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    • da-ra.de
    Updated Mar 14, 2023
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    GrĂ€f, Lorenz; KĂŒhnel, Steffen M.; Scheuch, Erwin K. (2023). Attitude to the Census (Panel: First wave, April - May 1987) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.1588
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 14, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Zentralarchiv fĂŒr empirische Sozialforschung, UniversitĂ€t zu Köln
    Authors
    GrĂ€f, Lorenz; KĂŒhnel, Steffen M.; Scheuch, Erwin K.
    Time period covered
    Apr 1987 - May 1987
    Area covered
    Germany
    Measurement technique
    Oral survey with standardized questionnaire
    Description

    Attitude of the German population and of census critics to the census before census day, 31 May 1987. Political attitudes.

    Topics: political interest; satisfaction with democracy in the Federal Republic; feeling of political effectiveness and degree of representation by politicians and parties; orientation of government policies on personal interest or public welfare; attitude to the census; intent to participate of members of household and respondent; willingness to participate after reference to threat of fine; filling out the survey questionnaire oneself or by another person in household; conversations about the census in social surroundings and time of last conversation; attitude to the census in circle of friends and acquaintances as well as their willingness to participate; importance of political attitudes in social surroundings and visibility of oneÂŽs own views; knowledge about contents of the census survey (scale); assumed difficulty of filling out the survey questionnaire; preference for filling it out in the presence of the canvasser or alone; misgivings about canvassers in residence; difficulties in taking care of official matters; frequency of contact and ability to establish contacts; trust in institutions and organizations; self-assessment on a left-right continuum; assumed position of the majority of the population on a left-right continuum; postmaterialism; sympathy scale for political parties; frequency of use of television news broadcasts as well as local news and political part of a daily newspaper; time of last noticed media reports about the census and tendency of content of these articles; assumed attitude of the population to the census; living together with a partner and his attitude to the census; assumed participation of partner in the census; response or boycott behavior during the census survey; attitude to government statistics; attitude to punishment of census boycotters and preferred government behavior regarding refusals; personal concerns regarding misuse of personal census data; trust in observance of data protection; sympathy regarding social movements as well as personal membership; party preference; perceived fears and their causes; attitude to technology; attitude to computers and to scientific innovations; attitude to government behavior with data; assessment of census refusers as system opponents; attitude to storing personal data; importance of data protection and trust in observance of the data protection regulation; judgement on the quality of data protection; earlier participation in a survey and type of survey; attitude to selected infringements of law and crimes as well as other illegal actions (scale); religiousness; union membership; self-assessment of social class; possession of a telephone; willingness to participate in a re-interview.

    The following additional questions were posed to persons with strong or very strong political interest: demographic information on close circle of friends (ego-centered network); agreement with the respondent regarding party preference and attitude to the census; willingness of friends to participate in the census; familiarity of friends with each other; personal willingness to participate in selected political forms of protest (scale); personal concerns regarding misuse of personal data by selected institutions and government offices.

    Demography: month of birth; year of birth; sex; marital status; number of children; ages of children (classified); religious denomination; frequency of church attendance; school education; vocational training; occupation; occupational position; employment; monthly gross income of respondent and household altogether; number of persons contributing to household income; size of household; position of respondent in household; characteristics of head of household; number of persons eligible to vote in household; persons in household who do not have German citizenship; self-assessment of social class; union membership of respondent and other members of household; possession of a telephone.

    Interviewer rating: presence of third persons during interview and person desiring this presence; intervention of others in interview and person introducing this intervention; attitude to the census of additional persons present during interview; presence of further persons in other rooms; willingness to cooperate and reliability of respondent.

    Also encoded was: length of interview; date of interview; identification of interviewer; sex of interviewer; age of interviewer.

  3. i

    Population and Housing Census 2010 - Thailand

    • catalog.ihsn.org
    • webapps.ilo.org
    • +1more
    Updated Mar 29, 2019
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    National Statistical Office (NSO) (2019). Population and Housing Census 2010 - Thailand [Dataset]. https://catalog.ihsn.org/index.php/catalog/4405
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 29, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    National Statistical Office (NSO)
    Time period covered
    2010
    Area covered
    Thailand
    Description

    Abstract

    The National Statistical Office carries out a population and housing census every 10 years, according to the United Nations’ recommendation. The 2010 census in Thailand was the eleventh population census and the fifth housing census of Thailand, and marked the 100th Anniversary of the Thailand Population Census Program.

    The objectives of the census were: 1) To compile basic information on the population and housing characteristics such as gender, age, religion, nationality, education, marital status, work status, type of dwelling and so on. 2) To obtain basic statistics at sub-region level (Village, area). 3) To measure changes in the composition of population and housing during the past 10 years.

    Geographic coverage

    National

    Analysis unit

    • Household
    • Individual
    • Housing

    Universe

    The coverage of population and the residence where population actually live in are as follows. Population in coverage: - All Thais citizens residing in Thailand on the Census day (September 1, 2010); - Thais/Non-Thais who usually live in Thailand but temporarily be outside the country on the Census Day; - All military servants, defenses, civil servants, and Thai diplomats, including their families, of which their stations were outside of Thailand. - Non-Thais who residing in Thailand at least three months prior to the Census Day.

    Population not covered: - Non-Thais military servants, defenses, civil servants, and diplomats, including their families, of which their stations were inside Thailand. - Non-Thais who live in Thailand less than three months prior to the Census Day. - Refugees or illegal migrants who live in the refugee camps.

    Housing coverage: - All houses or dwellings where people live in such as private houses, buildings, public housing, rooms in office, domiciles under bridges, etc.

    Kind of data

    Census/enumeration data [cen]

    Mode of data collection

    Face-to-face [f2f]

  4. A

    Mikrocensus 1981, 2. quarter: Additional Questions for the Population Census...

    • data.aussda.at
    pdf
    Updated Jun 24, 2020
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    Statistics Austria; Statistics Austria (2020). Mikrocensus 1981, 2. quarter: Additional Questions for the Population Census 1981 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.11587/OBTKIS
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    pdf(229640), pdf(89768)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 24, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    AUSSDA
    Authors
    Statistics Austria; Statistics Austria
    License

    https://data.aussda.at/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.11587/OBTKIShttps://data.aussda.at/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.11587/OBTKIS

    Area covered
    Austria
    Dataset funded by
    The standard program is commissioned by the Austrian Republic and statutorily regulated
    Description

    This survey consists of 6 parts: - migration: data on migration, i.e. immigration and emigration of households or individual; this information is important for population forecasts and the evaluation of the development of the individual geographic area - handicaps: reasons for including questions on this topic are the “year of handicapped persons” (1981), proclaimed by the UN and paying attentions to these questions from a statistical point of view; the questions had already been posed in September 1987 (Mikrozensus MZ7803) - additional occupation: these questions should give information on additional occupation of employed and unemployed persons; of course the Mikrozensus can only document legal additional occupation, not illegal employment - social stratification: questions on occupational stratum and the receiving of benefit payments serve the in-depth analysis of the other questions - income: the currently available income data in Austria do not allow the representation of the population according to the total income of one person and according to the income of the household; a detailed income survey is not possible in the Mikrozensus: the question program on income is limited to a single question and self-employed, as well as persons helping in the family business are not interviewed. - birth-biography and desire to have children: these questions were for the most part already posed in June 1967 (Mikrozensus MZ7602).

  5. Population and Housing Census 2000 - Thailand

    • webapps.ilo.org
    • dev.ihsn.org
    • +1more
    Updated May 6, 2016
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    National Statistical Office of Thailand (NSO) (2016). Population and Housing Census 2000 - Thailand [Dataset]. https://webapps.ilo.org/surveyLib/index.php/catalog/1128
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    Dataset updated
    May 6, 2016
    Dataset provided by
    National Statistical Office of Thailandhttp://nso.go.th/
    Authors
    National Statistical Office of Thailand (NSO)
    Time period covered
    2000
    Area covered
    Thailand
    Description

    Abstract

    The Population and Housing Census 2000 in Thailand was the tenth Population Census and the fourth Housing Census of Thailand. The objective of the census was to collect basic information on demographic, social, and economic characteristics of population as well as housing characteristics of everyone residing in the country. The census date is April 1, 2000.

    It contains data on: - characteristics of the household - personal characteristics - literacy and education - fertility - employment - migration - housing characteristics

    Geographic coverage

    National

    Analysis unit

    Households and individuals

    Universe

    Population Coverage 1) Population covered: - All Thai citizens residing in Thailand on the Census day (April 1, 2000); - Thai residents who usually live in Thailand but temporarily outside the country on the Census Day; - Thai civil/military diplomatic officers and their families in foreign countries; - Foreign citizens having usual place of abode in Thailand or entering the country on temporary basis at least three months prior to the Census Day.

    2) Population not covered: - Hilltribes with no fixed address (except those in well established villages); - Foreign military and diplomatic officers and their families stationed in Thailand; - Foreigners staying in the country for less than three months prior to the Census Day. - Refugees or illegal migrants staying in the centres designated by the authorities.

    Housing Coverage All private households in the areas of population enumeration.

    Kind of data

    Census/enumeration data [cen]

    Sampling procedure

    Microdata encompasses 1% of the Census 2000.

    The data of the entire Census (of which the attached datafiles comprise 1%) was sampled as follows All persons and households were listed and simultaneously enumerated with the basic information (age, sex, relationship to household head, marital status, religion, nationality, education, occupation, industry and work status) except for sample households. The sample households, which were 20 per cent of households in every area, were also asked for more detailed information and housing information. The self-enumeration questionnaires were based on the basic information.

    A post enumeration survey (PES) was carried out by staff members of the NSO. A stratified one-stage sample of 1,520 urban blocks and rural villages was selected. The purpose of the PES was to determine the completeness of an accuracy of the census (coverage error and content error). The content error includes relationship to head of household, age, sex, and marital status.

    Mode of data collection

    Face-to-face [f2f]

  6. e

    Employment characteristics

    • data.europa.eu
    excel xlsx
    Updated May 8, 2024
    + more versions
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    North Gate II & III - INS (STATBEL - Statistics Belgium) (2024). Employment characteristics [Dataset]. https://data.europa.eu/data/datasets/a609c23d556007485d25e00926a887f300a7dd53?locale=en
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    excel xlsxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 8, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Statistics Belgiumhttp://statbel.fgov.be/
    Authors
    North Gate II & III - INS (STATBEL - Statistics Belgium)
    Description

    The Census 2021 in a nutshell The Census 2021 is a snapshot of the population living in Belgium on 1 January 2021. It provides a wide range of figures on housing and demographic, socio-economic and educational characteristics of the citizens. The objective of the Census is twofold: to comply with the European regulation[1] and to produce statistics to address national specific needs (public services, international organizations, researchers, enterprises and private individuals). Previously based on an exhaustive survey of all citizens, since 2011 the Census has been based exclusively on the use of administrative databases. Definitions The various statistical units Population The population taken into account for the Census 2021 is the residential population, as registered in the National Register of Natural Persons (RNPP) on 1 January 2021. The Belgian population includes Belgians and non-Belgians who have been allowed or authorised to settle or to stay in Belgium but does not include non-Belgians living on the territory for less than three months, asylum seekers and non-Belgians in an illegal situation[2]. Private households This group includes people living alone in a dwelling and groups of several people living in the same dwelling and providing themselves with essentials for living. Family nuclei A family nucleus is defined as two or more persons who belong to the same household and who are related as husband and wife, as partners in a registered partnership, as partners in a consensual union, or as parent and child. Living quarters Living quarters refer to all quarters used as the usual residence of one or several persons. Conventional dwellings Conventional dwellings are separate units (surrounded by walls and covered by a roof) that are independent (with a direct access from the street or a staircase, passage) and designed to be used as a permanent dwelling. Occupied conventional dwellings Occupied conventional dwellings are conventional dwellings used as the usual residence of one or several private households. Variables and their description Sex This variable is used to distinguish men from women. Age The age reached in completed years of age on 1 January 2021. Place of usual residence The place of residence is that registered in the National Register on 1 January 2021. So this is the place of legal residence. The Belgian municipalities have changed between 2011 and 2021. In the comparisons shown on this website, the figures for 2011 are broken down according to the municipalities of 2021. Locality A locality is defined as a distinct population cluster, that is an area defined by population living in neighbouring or contiguous buildings. This area constitutes a group of buildings, none of which is separated from its nearest neighbour by more than 200 meters. The Belgian municipalities have changed between 2011 and 2021. In the comparisons shown on this website, the figures for 2011 are broken down according to the municipalities of 2021. Employed persons The following persons are considered as employed : persons aged 15 or over and who either performed at least one hour of work in the last week of the year for pay or profit, in cash or in kind; or were temporarily absent during the reference period from a job to which they maintained a formal attachment . Status in employment Status in employment: distinction between employees, employers and own-account workers. Location of place of work Location of place of work: geographical area in which a currently employed person does his/her job. Industry Industry: kind of production or activity of the establishment - or enterprise, if the establishment is not known - in which the main job of an employed person is located. Remark The comparison with the previous Census requires some caution: this publication is based on the Belgian population and the Census 2011 has as reference the European definition of the population. Information on the difference between the Belgian population and the Census 2011 population. Metadata Methodological note Differences between the labour market statistics of the Census and the LFS [1] COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING REGULATION (EU) 2017/543 of 22 March 2017 laying down rules for the application of Regulation (EC) No 763/2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council on population and housing censuses as regards the technical specifications of the topics and of their breakdowns. [2]Information on the difference between the Belgian population and the Census 2011 population.

  7. g

    Einstellung zur VolkszÀhlung (Panelstudie)

    • search.gesis.org
    • da-ra.de
    Updated Apr 13, 2010
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    GrĂ€f, Lorenz; KĂŒhnel, Steffen M.; Scheuch, Erwin K. (2010). Einstellung zur VolkszĂ€hlung (Panelstudie) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.1592
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    application/x-stata-dta(1911986), application/x-spss-por(3636208), application/x-spss-sav(1966972)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 13, 2010
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS search
    GESIS Data Archive
    Authors
    GrĂ€f, Lorenz; KĂŒhnel, Steffen M.; Scheuch, Erwin K.
    License

    https://www.gesis.org/en/institute/data-usage-termshttps://www.gesis.org/en/institute/data-usage-terms

    Variables measured
    IDNR -, LFDNR -, P1001 -, P1002 -, P1003 -, P1004 -, P1005 -, P1006 -, P1007 -, P1008 -, and 647 more
    Description

    Attitude of the Federal German population and census critics to the census on 31. May 1987.

    Summary of three data sets archived and described under ZA Study Nos. 1588 to 1590.

    Topics: 1. From the first wave of 1987: political interest; satisfaction with democracy in the Federal Republic; feeling of political effectiveness and degree of representation by politicians and parties; orientation of government policies on special interests or public welfare; attitude to the census; intent of members of household and respondent to participate; willingness to participate after notice of threat of fine; filling out the survey form oneself or by another person in household; conversations about the census in social surroundings and time of last conversation; attitude to the census in circle of friends and acquaintances as well as their willingness to participate; importance of political attitudes in social surroundings and visibility of oneÂŽs own views; knowledge about contents of the census survey (scale); assumed difficulty in filling out survey form; preference for filling out the form in the presence of the canvasser or alone; misgivings about canvasser in residence; difficulties in carrying out official matters; frequency of contact and ability to establish contacts; trust in institutions and organizations; self-assessment on a left-right continuum; assumed position of the majority of the population on a left-right continuum; postmaterialism; sympathy scale for political parties; frequency of use of television news broadcasts as well as the local part and political part of a daily newspaper; time of last noticed media reports about the census and content tendency of these programs; assumed attitude of the population to the census; living together with a partner and his attitude to the census; assumed participation of partner in the census; response or boycott conduct in the census survey; attitude to government statistics; attitude to punishment of census boycotters and preferred governmental behavior regarding refusal; personal fears regarding misuse of personal census data; trust in observance of data protection; sympathies regarding social movements as well as personal membership; party preference; perceived fears and their causes; attitude to technology; attitude to computers and scientific innovations; attitude to government dealing with data; assessment of census refusers as system opponents; attitude to storage of personal data; importance of data protection and trust in observance of the data protection regulation; judgement on quality of data protection; earlier participation in a survey and type of survey; attitude to selected infringements and crimes as well as other illegal actions (scale); religiousness; union membership; self-assessment of social class; possession of a telephone; willingness to participate in a re-interview.

    The following additional questions were posed to persons with strong or very strong political interest: demographic information on circle of close friends (ego-centered network); agreement with respondent regarding party preference and attitude to the census; willingness of friends to participate in the census; familiarity of friends among each other; personal willingness to participate in selected political forms of protest (scale); personal fears regarding misuse of personal data by selected institutions and public offices.

    Demography: month of birth; year of birth; sex; marital status; number of children; ages of children (classified); frequency of church attendance; school education; vocational training; occupation; occupational position; employment; monthly net income of respondent and household altogether; number of persons contributing to household income; size of household; position of respondent in household; characteristics of head of household; number of persons eligible to vote in household; persons in household who do not have German citizenship; self-assessment of social class; union membership of respondent and other members of household; possession of a telephone.

    Interviewer rating: presence of third persons during interview and person desiring this presence; intervention of others in interview and person introducing the intervention; attitude to the census of persons additionally present during interview; presence of further persons in other rooms; willingness to cooperate and reliability of respondent.

    Also encoded was: length of interview; date of interview; ident...

  8. e

    Attitude to the Census (Panel: 3rd Wave, November 1987 - January 1988) -...

    • b2find.eudat.eu
    Updated Oct 23, 2023
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    (2023). Attitude to the Census (Panel: 3rd Wave, November 1987 - January 1988) - Dataset - B2FIND [Dataset]. https://b2find.eudat.eu/dataset/789a5485-769b-585a-b993-bb7b911e831a
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 23, 2023
    Description

    Attitude of the German population and of critics of the census to the census after census day on 31 May 1987. Political attitudes. Topics: political interest; satisfaction with democracy in the Federal Republic; government orientation toward its own interests or public interest; perceived protection of rights to freedom by the political system and the current Federal Government; satisfaction with the job of the Federal Government; attitude to the census; receipt of a written request to fill out the questionnaire; intent to participate in the census before start of counting; personal willingness to participate in the census even given voluntary participation; assumed level of non-participation in the census; attitude to the census in oneÂŽs circle of friends and acquaintances; conversations about the census in social surroundings after conclusion of the survey and time of last conversation; knowledge about contents of the census survey; additionally expected questions; questions that one would not gladly answer; response or boycott behavior during the survey; attitude to government statistics; attitude to punishment of census boycotters and knowledge of cases of refusal; assumed willingness of the population to participate as well as honesty of responses given voluntary participation in the census; voluntarily providing selected personal data; preference for census or providing data already available by government offices; assumed benefit or damage from discussions about the census in the media and reasons for this assessment; attitude to earlier calls for boycott and to the time of survey; judgement on the success of the boycott movement; attitude to selected arguments for and against the census; benefit of a census; attitude to the obligation to provide information; census boycott as protest against the government; census participation as democratic duty; self-assessment on a left-right continuum; assumed position of the majority of the population on a left-right continuum; understanding of democracy and comparison of this right with reality in the Federal Republic; party preference; violation of fundamental rights by measures of authorities perceived personally or by persons from social surroundings; attitude to technology; perceived insecurity in contact with authorities and attitude to government offices; concerns regarding misuse of personal census data; trust in observance of data protection; attitude to storage of personal data; importance of data protection; assumed observance of data protection regulations; knowledge of cases of data misuse and source of information about such violations; assumed willingness to participate in a future census; attitude to opinion polls (scale); willingness to participate in a microcensus survey; willingness to provide information from oneÂŽs private sphere to friends, neighbors, census bureaus and scientific surveys; attitude to selected government statistics; willingness to respond in order to make statistics possible; fear of data misuse; concerns regarding misuse of personal data by selected institutions and government offices (scale); attitude to selected illegal actions (scale); religiousness (scale); attitude to questions of belief and the meaning of life (scale); belief in supernatural, inexplicable events as well as horoscopes and telepathy. Demography: month of birth; year of birth; sex; religious denomination; school education; employment; college in vicinity of place of residence; students in residential area; possession of a telephone. Interviewer rating: presence of third persons during interview and person desiring this presence; intervention of others in interview and person causing the intervention; attitude to the census of other persons present during interview; presence of further persons in other rooms; reliability and willingness of respondent to cooperate. Additionally encoded were: length of interview; date of interview; identification of interviewer; sex of interviewer; age of interviewer. Einstellung der bundesdeutschen Bevölkerung und von VolkszĂ€hlungskritikern zur VolkszĂ€hlung nach dem Stichtag am 31. Mai 1987. Politische Einstellungen. Themen: Politisches Interesse; Zufriedenheit mit der Demokratie in der Bundesrepublik; Interessen- oder Gemeinwohlorientierung der Regierung; empfundener Schutz der Freiheitsrechte durch das politische System und die gegenwĂ€rtige Bundesregierung; Zufriedenheit mit der Arbeit der Bundesregierung; Einstellung zur VolkszĂ€hlung; Erhalt einer schriftlichen Aufforderung zum AusfĂŒllen des Fragebogens; Teilnahmeabsicht an der VolkszĂ€hlung vor Beginn der ZĂ€hlung; eigene Bereitschaft zur Teilnahme an der VolkszĂ€hlung, auch bei freiwilliger Teilnahme; vermutete Höhe der Nichtbeteiligung an der VolkszĂ€hlung; Einstellung zur VolkszĂ€hlung im Freundes- und Bekanntenkreis; GesprĂ€che ĂŒber die VolkszĂ€hlung im sozialen Umfeld nach Abschluß der Erhebung und Zeitpunkt des letzten GesprĂ€chs; Kenntnisse ĂŒber die Inhalte der VolkszĂ€hlungsbefragung; zusĂ€tzlich erwartete Fragen; Fragen, die ungern beantwortet wurden; Antwort- bzw. Boykottverhalten bei der Erhebung; Einstellung zu staatlichen Statistiken; Einstellung zu einer Bestrafung von VolkszĂ€hlungsboykotteuren und Kenntnis von VerweigerungsfĂ€llen; vermutete Teilnahmebereitschaft der Bevölkerung sowie der Antwortehrlichkeit bei Freiwilligkeit der Teilnahme an der VolkszĂ€hlung; freiwillige Weitergabe ausgewĂ€hlter persönlicher Daten; PrĂ€ferenz fĂŒr VolkszĂ€hlung oder Weitergabe von bereits vorliegenden Daten durch die Ämter; vermuteter Nutzen oder Schaden der Diskussion ĂŒber die VolkszĂ€hlung in den Medien und GrĂŒnde fĂŒr diese EinschĂ€tzung; Einstellung zu frĂŒheren Boykottaufrufen und zum Befragungszeitpunkt; Beurteilung des Erfolgs der Boykottbewegung; Einstellung zu ausgewĂ€hlten Argumenten fĂŒr und gegen die VolkszĂ€hlung; Nutzen einer VolkszĂ€hlung; Einstellung zur Auskunftspflicht; VolkszĂ€hlungsboykott als Protest gegen den Staat; VolkszĂ€hlungsteilnahme als demokratische Pflicht; SelbsteinschĂ€tzung auf einem Links-Rechts-Kontinuum; vermutete Position der Bevölkerungsmehrheit auf einem Links-Rechts-Kontinuum; DemokratieverstĂ€ndnis und Vergleich dieses Anspruchs mit der Wirklichkeit in der Bundesrepublik; ParteiprĂ€ferenz; persönlich oder von Personen des sozialen Umfelds empfundene Verletzung der Grundrechte durch Behördenmaßnahmen; Einstellung zur Technik; empfundene Unsicherheiten bei Behördenkontakten und Einstellung gegenĂŒber Ämtern; BefĂŒrchtungen hinsicht lich einer Zweckentfremdung der persönlichen VolkszĂ€hlungsdaten; Vertrauen in die Einhaltung des Datenschutzes; Einstellung zur Speicherung personenbezogener Daten; Wichtigkeit des Datenschutzes vermutete Einhaltung der Datenschutzbestimmungen; Kenntnis von FĂ€llen des Datenmißbrauchs und Informationsquelle ĂŒber solche VerstĂ¶ĂŸe; vermutete Teilnahmebereitschaft an einer zukĂŒnftigen VolkszĂ€hlung; Einstellung zu Meinungsumfragen (Skala); Teilnahmebereitschaft an einer Mikrozensus-Erhebung; Weitergabebereitschaft von Informationen aus der PrivatsphĂ€re an Freunde, Nachbarn, statistische Ämter und in wissenschaftlichen Umfragen; Einstellung zu ausgewĂ€hlten staatlichen Statistiken; Antwortbereitschaft, um Statistiken zu ermöglichen; Angst vor Datenmißbrauch; BefĂŒrchtungen hinsichtlich einer Zweckentfremdung der persönlichen Daten durch ausgewĂ€hlte Institutionen und Ämter (Skala); Einstellung zu ausgewĂ€hlten illegalen Handlungen (Skala); ReligiositĂ€t (Skalometer); Einstellung zu Glaubensfragen und zum Sinn des Lebens (Skala); Glaube an ĂŒbersinnliche, unerklĂ€rliche Ereignisse sowie an Horoskope und Telepathie. Demographie: Geburtsmonat; Geburtsjahr; Geschlecht; Konfession; Schulbildung; BerufstĂ€tigkeit; Hochschule in WohnortnĂ€he; Studenten in der Wohngegend; Telefonbesitz. Interviewerrating: Anwesenheit Dritter beim Interview und Person, die die Anwesenheit erwĂŒnschte; Eingriffe Dritter in das Interview und Person, die die Intervention herbeifĂŒhrte; Einstellung der beim Interview zusĂ€tzlich anwesenden Person zur VolkszĂ€hlung; Anwesenheit weiterer Personen in anderen RĂ€umen; Kooperationsbereitschaft und ZuverlĂ€ssigkeit des Befragten. ZusĂ€tzlich verkodet wurde: Interviewdauer; Interviewdatum; Intervieweridentifikation; Interviewergeschlecht; Intervieweralter. Re-interview of the persons interviewed in the second panel wave (ZA Study No. 1589) as well as of persons interviewed in the first panel wave (ZA Study No. 1588), but not contacted in the survey of the second panel wave. Wiederbefragung der in der 2. Panel-Welle befragten Personen (ZA-Studien-Nr. 1589) sowie von Personen, die in der 1. Panel-Well interviewt wurden (ZA-Studien-Nr. 1588), bei der Befragung der 2. Panel-Welle aber nicht angetroffen wurden.

  9. d

    Area and Population: State-wise (Census 2011)

    • dataful.in
    Updated Apr 4, 2025
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    Dataful (Factly) (2025). Area and Population: State-wise (Census 2011) [Dataset]. https://dataful.in/datasets/21090
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    csv, xlsx, application/x-parquetAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 4, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Dataful (Factly)
    License

    https://dataful.in/terms-and-conditionshttps://dataful.in/terms-and-conditions

    Area covered
    India
    Variables measured
    Area
    Description

    The data shows for each state/union territory the area, population by gender and population by urban/rural.

    Note: The area figures of States and U.T's do not add up to area of India because : (i) The shortfall of 7 square km. area of Madhya Pradesh and 3 square km. area of Chhattisgarh is yet to be resolved by the Survey of India. (ii) Disputed area of 13 square km. between Pondicherry and Andhra Pradesh is neither included in Pondicherry nor in Andhra Pradesh. For All India: 1) The population figures excludes population of the area under unlawful occupation of Pakistan and China where Census could not be taken. 2) Area figures includes the area under unlawful occupation of Pakistan and China. The area includes 78,114 sq.km. under illegal occupation of Pakistan, 5,180 sq. km.illegally handed over by Pakistan to China and 37,555 sq.km. under illegal occupation of China.

  10. c

    Police Calls for Service

    • opendata.cityofboise.org
    Updated Sep 12, 2022
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    City of Boise, Idaho (2022). Police Calls for Service [Dataset]. https://opendata.cityofboise.org/datasets/police-calls-for-service/api
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 12, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Boise, Idaho
    License

    MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This dataset comprises all incidents reported to the Ada County Dispatch Center that were responded to by the Boise Police Department. It includes details about the date, type, general location and response time for each incident.The fact that an incident was reported to Ada County Dispatch does not necessarily mean a crime was committed or that an arrest occurred. Data is based on initial information provided to Ada County Dispatch, and therefore may be inaccurate. This dataset does not include crime data, case records, arrest information, final case determination or any other incident outcome data.To explore dashboards based on this dataset, please visit: https://www.cityofboise.org/government/data-transparency/data-and-dashboards/police-data-and-dashboards/.Field Definitions:Incident Number - Unique identifier of the incident.Response Date Time - The date and time the incident was reported to Ada County Dispatch. Time is stored in UTC, but when viewing on the Open Data site, a correction is applied to show in local time zone. When downloading the data, the time zone will be UTC.Jurisdiction Agency - The agency that has jurisdiction in the area an incident occurs. For example, if an incident occurs in eastern Meridian, a Boise police officer may be asked to respond if she is the closest to the scene of the incident. This incident would be included in the dataset because it was responded to by the Boise Police Department; however, the “Jurisdiction Agency” field would read Meridian Police Department because the incident occurred within Meridian’s jurisdiction.Final Priority - Indicates the urgency or priority of police incident, where “3” is the highest priority and an emergency, and “1” is the lowest priority and least urgent response.Call Source - "Public” indicates an incident was reported to dispatch by a member of the public. “Officer” indicates the incident was initiated by a police officer. For example, if a police officer witnesses an incident in progress it would be coded as “Officer.”Call Type - Indicates whether an incident was reported via 911 or not. “Non-911” incidents include those reported to non-emergency dispatch or those initiated by a police officer.Incident Category - Indicates the type of incident that occurred. There are 13 categories including:Community Assistance - A broad range of incident types including noise complaints, building or vehicle alarms, abandoned vehicles and complaints of suspicious suspects.Crash - Includes injury and non-injury crashes as well as hit-and-run incidents.Domestic Violence - Includes domestic battery, threats of violence and general domestic disputes.Emergency Management - Includes all incidents related to emergencies including flooding, hazardous material spills and assistance on fires.Graffiti - Any writing or drawing on a surface without permission.Mental Health - Includes requests for Police to check on the welfare of a person, and reports of suicidal person or a person in crisis.NCO\PO Violation - Any violation of a restraining order such as a "No Contact Order" or a "Protection Order", often related to domestic violence.Other - More than 40 different incident types ranging from a request to follow-up on a previous call, to boating or parking violations.Property Crimes - Includes theft, fraud, vandalism and burglary.Sex Crimes - Includes sexual assault, rape and indecent exposure.Society Crimes - A broad range of incident types including illegal fireworks, illegal dumping, illegal camping, and liquor or drug violations.Traffic - Any traffic incident (reckless driving, speeding, etc.) that does not involve a crash.Violent Crimes - A broad range of incident types including reports of assault, armed robbery, shootings, fights and kidnappings.Census Tract - A geographic area used by the Census Bureau. A Census Tract is roughly the size of a neighborhood and typically has between 2,500 and 8,000 residents.Census GEOID - A geographic identity code used by the Census Bureau to identify different areas. This dataset uses an 11-digit code that combines a 5-digit county code with a 6-digit census tract code.Neighborhood Association - Names the neighborhood association in which the incident occurred. If an incident occurs outside the boundaries of a neighborhood association, this field has a null value.First Assigned First Arrived Duration (sec) - The period of time (in seconds) between when dispatch assigns an officer to respond to an incident, and when the first officer arrives on scene. This could also be called the police travel time. This field may show as null or zero if the incident was initiated by an officer.First Assigned First Arrived Duration (hh:mm:ss) - The period of time (hh:mm:ss) between when dispatch assigns an officer to respond to an incident, and when the first officer arrives on scene. This could also be called the police travel time. This field may show as null or zero if the incident was initiated by an officer.Call Received First Assigned Duration (sec) - The period of time (in seconds) between when dispatch receives a call for service, and when they assign a police officer to respond. This could also be called the call time. This field may show as null or zero if the incident was initiated by an officer.Call Received First Assigned Duration (hh:mm:ss) - The period of time (hh:mm:ss) between when dispatch receives a call for service, and when they assign a police officer to respond. This could also be called the call time. This field may show as null or zero if the incident was initiated by an officer.Call Received First Arrived Duration (sec) - The period of time (in seconds) between when dispatch receives a call for service, and when the first officer arrives on scene. This field may show as null or zero if the incident was initiated by an officer.Call Received First Arrived Duration (hh:mm:ss) - The period of time (hh:mm:ss) between when dispatch receives a call for service, and when the first officer arrives on scene. This field may show as null or zero if the incident was initiated by an officer.First Assigned Last Cleared Duration (sec) (hh:mm:ss) - The period of time (in seconds) between when dispatch assigns an officer to respond to an incident, to when the final police officer leaves the scene of the incident.First Assigned Last Cleared Duration (hh:mm:ss) - The period of time (hh:mm:ss) between when dispatch assigns an officer to respond to an incident, to when the final police officer leaves the scene of the incident.Call Received Second Arrived Duration (sec)- The period of time (in seconds) between when dispatch receives a call for service, and when the second officer arrives on scene. This field may show as null or zero if the incident was initiated by an officer.Call Received Second Arrived Duration (hh:mm:ss) - The period of time (hh:mm:ss) between when dispatch receives a call for service, and when the second officer arrives on scene. This field may show as null or zero if the incident was initiated by an officer.

  11. b

    Caractéristiques

    • ldf.belgif.be
    Updated Aug 4, 2024
    + more versions
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    (2024). Caractéristiques [Dataset]. https://ldf.belgif.be/datagovbe?subject=http%3A%2F%2Fdata.gov.be%2Fdataset%2Fstatbelpubs%2Ffd4badbc8721849658e242f7f0c852d33b6f5899
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 4, 2024
    Variables measured
    http://publications.europa.eu/resource/authority/data-theme/ECON
    Description

    Die VolkszĂ€hlung 2021 ist eine Momentaufnahme der Bevölkerung, die am 1. Januar 2021 in Belgien lebt. Es bietet eine breite Palette von Zahlen zu Wohnraum und demografischen, sozioökonomischen und bildungsbezogenen Merkmalen der BĂŒrger. Mit der VolkszĂ€hlung werden zwei Ziele verfolgt: Einhaltung der europĂ€ischen Verordnung[1] und Erstellung von Statistiken, um den spezifischen nationalen BedĂŒrfnissen (öffentliche Dienste, internationale Organisationen, Forscher, Unternehmen und Privatpersonen) gerecht zu werden. Zuvor basierte die VolkszĂ€hlung auf einer umfassenden Befragung aller BĂŒrger und basiert seit 2011 ausschließlich auf der Nutzung administrativer Datenbanken. Definitionen Die verschiedenen statistischen Einheiten Bevölkerung Die bei der VolkszĂ€hlung 2021 berĂŒcksichtigte Bevölkerung ist die Wohnbevölkerung, die am 1. Januar 2021 im Nationalen Register natĂŒrlicher Personen (RNPP) registriert wurde. Die belgische Bevölkerung umfasst Belgier und Nicht-Belgier, denen erlaubt oder genehmigt wurde, sich in Belgien niederzulassen oder sich dort aufzuhalten, nicht jedoch Nicht-Belgier, die weniger als drei Monate im Hoheitsgebiet leben, Asylbewerber und Nicht-Belgier, die sich in einer illegalen Situation befinden[2]. Zu dieser Gruppe gehören Personen, die allein in einer Wohnung leben, und Gruppen von mehreren Personen, die in derselben Wohnung leben und sich mit lebensnotwendigen GĂŒtern versorgen. Ein Familienkern ist definiert als zwei oder mehr Personen, die demselben Haushalt angehören und als Ehemann und Ehefrau, als Partner in einer eingetragenen Partnerschaft, als Partner in einer einvernehmlichen Vereinigung oder als Elternteil und Kind verwandt sind. Wohnquartiere Wohnquartiere beziehen sich auf alle Quartiere, die als ĂŒblicher Wohnsitz einer oder mehrerer Personen genutzt werden. Herkömmliche Wohnungen Herkömmliche Wohnungen sind separate Einheiten (umgeben von WĂ€nden und mit einem Dach bedeckt), die unabhĂ€ngig sind (mit direktem Zugang von der Straße oder einer Treppe, Durchgang) und als dauerhafte Wohnung genutzt werden können. Besetzte konventionelle Wohnungen Besetzte konventionelle Wohnungen sind herkömmliche Wohnungen, die als ĂŒblicher Wohnsitz eines oder mehrerer Privathaushalte genutzt werden. Variablen und ihre Beschreibung Geschlecht Diese Variable wird verwendet, um MĂ€nner von Frauen zu unterscheiden. Alter Das Alter, das am 1. Januar 2021 in vollendeten Jahren erreicht wurde. Der gewöhnliche Aufenthaltsort ist derjenige, der am 1. Januar 2021 im nationalen Register eingetragen ist. Dies ist also der Ort des rechtmĂ€ĂŸigen Wohnsitzes. Die belgischen Gemeinden haben sich zwischen 2011 und 2021 verĂ€ndert. In den auf dieser Website dargestellten Vergleichen werden die Zahlen fĂŒr 2011 nach den Gemeinden des Jahres 2021 aufgeschlĂŒsselt. LokalitĂ€t Ein Lokal ist definiert als ein ausgeprĂ€gter Bevölkerungscluster, dh ein Gebiet, das von der Bevölkerung definiert wird, die in benachbarten oder zusammenhĂ€ngenden GebĂ€uden lebt. Dieses Gebiet bildet eine Gruppe von GebĂ€uden, von denen keines mehr als 200 Meter von seinem nĂ€chsten Nachbarn getrennt ist. Die belgischen Gemeinden haben sich zwischen 2011 und 2021 verĂ€ndert. In den auf dieser Website dargestellten Vergleichen werden die Zahlen fĂŒr 2011 nach den Gemeinden des Jahres 2021 aufgeschlĂŒsselt. Anzahl der Personen Diese Zahl ist die Anzahl der Personen, fĂŒr die die Wohneinheit zum Zeitpunkt der VolkszĂ€hlung der rechtmĂ€ĂŸige Wohnsitz ist. Anzahl der RĂ€ume von Wohneinheiten Ein „Raum“ ist definiert als ein Raum in einer Wohneinheit, der von WĂ€nden umgeben ist, die vom Boden bis zur Decke oder zum Dach reichen und groß genug sind, um ein Bett fĂŒr einen Erwachsenen (mindestens 4 Quadratmeter) und mindestens 2 Meter hoch ĂŒber der HauptflĂ€che der Decke zu halten. Dichtestandard Diese Variable bezieht die Anzahl der Zimmer auf die Anzahl der Personen. Diese Variable unterscheidet Wohnungen mit feststehender Badewanne oder Dusche von Wohnungen ohne feststehende Badewanne oder Dusche. Art der Heizung Diese Variable unterscheidet Wohnungen mit Zentralheizung von denen ohne. Anmerkung Der Vergleich mit der vorherigen VolkszĂ€hlung erfordert einige Vorsicht: Diese Veröffentlichung basiert auf der belgischen Bevölkerung und die VolkszĂ€hlung 2011 bezieht sich auf die europĂ€ische Definition der Bevölkerung. Informationen ĂŒber den Unterschied zwischen der belgischen Bevölkerung und der VolkszĂ€hlung 2011. [1] DURCHFÜHRUNGSVERORDNUNG (EU) 2017/543 DER KOMMISSION vom 22. MĂ€rz 2017 mit DurchfĂŒhrungsbestimmungen zur Verordnung (EG) Nr. 763/2008 des EuropĂ€ischen Parlaments und des Rates ĂŒber Volks- und WohnungszĂ€hlungen hinsichtlich der technischen Spezifikationen der Themen und ihrer AufschlĂŒsselung. [2] Angaben zur Differenz zwischen der belgischen Bevölkerung und der VolkszĂ€hlung 2011.

  12. g

    Einstellung zur VolkszÀhlung (Panel: 3. Welle, November 1987-Januar 1988)

    • search.gesis.org
    • pollux-fid.de
    • +1more
    Updated Apr 13, 2010
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    GrĂ€f, Lorenz; KĂŒhnel, Steffen M.; Scheuch, Erwin K. (2010). Einstellung zur VolkszĂ€hlung (Panel: 3. Welle, November 1987-Januar 1988) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.1590
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    application/x-spss-sav(332260), application/x-spss-por(566521), application/x-stata-dta(317735)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 13, 2010
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS search
    GESIS Data Archive
    Authors
    GrĂ€f, Lorenz; KĂŒhnel, Steffen M.; Scheuch, Erwin K.
    License

    https://www.gesis.org/en/institute/data-usage-termshttps://www.gesis.org/en/institute/data-usage-terms

    Variables measured
    IDNR -, P3001 -, P3002 -, P3007 -, P3009 -, P3016 -, P3023 -, P3067 -, P3068 -, P3119 -, and 191 more
    Description

    Attitude of the German population and of critics of the census to the census after census day on 31 May 1987. Political attitudes.

    Topics: political interest; satisfaction with democracy in the Federal Republic; government orientation toward its own interests or public interest; perceived protection of rights to freedom by the political system and the current Federal Government; satisfaction with the job of the Federal Government; attitude to the census; receipt of a written request to fill out the questionnaire; intent to participate in the census before start of counting; personal willingness to participate in the census even given voluntary participation; assumed level of non-participation in the census; attitude to the census in oneÂŽs circle of friends and acquaintances; conversations about the census in social surroundings after conclusion of the survey and time of last conversation; knowledge about contents of the census survey; additionally expected questions; questions that one would not gladly answer; response or boycott behavior during the survey; attitude to government statistics; attitude to punishment of census boycotters and knowledge of cases of refusal; assumed willingness of the population to participate as well as honesty of responses given voluntary participation in the census; voluntarily providing selected personal data; preference for census or providing data already available by government offices; assumed benefit or damage from discussions about the census in the media and reasons for this assessment; attitude to earlier calls for boycott and to the time of survey; judgement on the success of the boycott movement; attitude to selected arguments for and against the census; benefit of a census; attitude to the obligation to provide information; census boycott as protest against the government; census participation as democratic duty; self-assessment on a left-right continuum; assumed position of the majority of the population on a left-right continuum; understanding of democracy and comparison of this right with reality in the Federal Republic; party preference; violation of fundamental rights by measures of authorities perceived personally or by persons from social surroundings; attitude to technology; perceived insecurity in contact with authorities and attitude to government offices; concerns regarding misuse of personal census data; trust in observance of data protection; attitude to storage of personal data; importance of data protection; assumed observance of data protection regulations; knowledge of cases of data misuse and source of information about such violations; assumed willingness to participate in a future census; attitude to opinion polls (scale); willingness to participate in a microcensus survey; willingness to provide information from oneÂŽs private sphere to friends, neighbors, census bureaus and scientific surveys; attitude to selected government statistics; willingness to respond in order to make statistics possible; fear of data misuse; concerns regarding misuse of personal data by selected institutions and government offices (scale); attitude to selected illegal actions (scale); religiousness (scale); attitude to questions of belief and the meaning of life (scale); belief in supernatural, inexplicable events as well as horoscopes and telepathy.

    Demography: month of birth; year of birth; sex; religious denomination; school education; employment; college in vicinity of place of residence; students in residential area; possession of a telephone.

    Interviewer rating: presence of third persons during interview and person desiring this presence; intervention of others in interview and person causing the intervention; attitude to the census of other persons present during interview; presence of further persons in other rooms; reliability and willingness of respondent to cooperate.

    Additionally encoded were: length of interview; date of interview; identification of interviewer; sex of interviewer; age of interviewer.

  13. d

    Census 2011: State wise Area, Households, Female and Male Population

    • dataful.in
    Updated Jul 29, 2025
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    Census 2011: State wise Area, Households, Female and Male Population [Dataset]. https://dataful.in/datasets/173
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    csv, xlsx, application/x-parquetAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 29, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Dataful (Factly)
    License

    https://dataful.in/terms-and-conditionshttps://dataful.in/terms-and-conditions

    Time period covered
    2011
    Area covered
    States of India
    Variables measured
    Area, Population
    Description

    This Dataset contains statistics related to State wise Area, Households, Female and Male Population of Census 2011.

    Note:The population figures exclude the population of the area under unlawful occupation of Pakistan and China where Census could not be taken.

    Area figures include the area under unlawful occupation of Pakistan and China. The area includes 78,114 Sq.km under illegal occupation of Pakistan, 5180 Sq.km illegally handed over by Pakistan to China and 37,555 Sq.km under illegal occupation of China.

  14. i

    Micro and Small Enterprise Survey, 2001 - Turkiye

    • catalog.ihsn.org
    • dev.ihsn.org
    • +1more
    Updated Jun 14, 2022
    + more versions
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    Economic Research Forum (2022). Micro and Small Enterprise Survey, 2001 - Turkiye [Dataset]. https://catalog.ihsn.org/index.php/catalog/3081
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 14, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Economic Research Forum
    Time period covered
    2001
    Area covered
    TĂŒrkiye
    Description

    Abstract

    The project on "Promoting Competitiveness in Micro and Small Enterprises" (MSE) was initiated in 2000 by the Economic Research Forum, with the main objective has been to expand the knowledge on this sector in the Middle East and North Africa region, with the ultimate aim of designing relevant policies and specific programs to help this sector fulfill its enormous growth potentials. Constituting an average of 95% of the number of enterprises in the region, it is presumed that promoting this sector will have a positive spill-over effect on the economies of the region.

    Discussions on the results of the project have pointed to an emerging consensus that it will be filling a knowledge gap related to the micro and small enterprises sector in the MENA region. Policies and strategies designed to promote this sector have not been adequately targeting their needs, and thus this project is considered to be of great relevance to the policy making process. Specifically, the main contributions may be summarized as follows:

    1) The database gathered through the project based on field surveys is considered unique, as to the number of enterprises covered (18,000), and the information produced, including information on the enterprise, the entrepreneur and the household. A special focus on women entrepreneurs have been made throughout the survey. This mine of data will undoubtedly provide background information that enables policy makers to design relevant policies.

    2) The "Policy Briefs" gives a concise summary of the outcome of each country study and highlights the recommendations reached based on the analysis.

    3) The current Country reports series is prepared based on the findings of the surveys, detailed information about the performance of the enterprises, determinants of success and prospects for the future are given. Special focus on the status of women entrepreneurs is also made.

    4) The Synthesis report will have a comparative analytical approach of the case studies of the four countries. This report will asses the MSE sector in the four countries and will draw relevant policy recommendations for the region.

    It has been evidently shown that promoting this sector could contribute to the solution of the increasing unemployment problem in the region, and a means to alleviate poverty through income generation. The spillover effects that this sector if properly developed will positively affect the development of the countries concerned. However, the real level of knowledge about the MSEs is surprisingly low.

    The Micro and Small Enterprises survey (MSEs) study in Turkey attempts to make an essential contribution to the knowledge of MSEs in Turkey by investigating both the internal conditions and the dynamics of MSEs as well as examining the external economic and social conditions pertaining to their performance and development. For the most part, studies of small enterprises in Turkey focus on the SMEs operating in the manufacturing sector. Furthermore, they lay emphasis on larger SMEs. The present study, by contrast, focuses on a neglected group of enterprises in the Turkish economy, namely, the portion of the SMEs which contain smaller enterprises. This portion is significant; it constitutes 99.4% of the total nonagricultural enterprises in Turkey (TURKSTAT, 2002). Moreover, this study does not only cover the manufacturing sector, but all sectors of the economy except the agricultural sector. It is also distinguished by its scope of investigation as it provides an assessment of MSEs in the economy as a whole within a dynamic context.

    The present study attempts to identify the following:

    i. the importance of MSEs in the economy vis-Ă -vis their contribution to the national value-added and employment in the main sectors of the economy; ii. the characteristics of MSEs and their entrepreneurs, with particular emphasize on their similarities, differences, and the ways in which they affect the performance of the MSEs; iii. the dynamics of success and failure of MSEs; iv. the role played by the economic and social environment in enabling or hindering the performance of MSEs, thus focusing on the legal, bureaucratic, economic, financial and social conditions that constrain or facilitate the operation of MSEs; and v. the policy recommendations that would enable MSEs to perform their activities in a more efficient way, and at the same time contributing to their growth and generation of decent and productive work.

    Geographic coverage

    National coverage

    Analysis unit

    1- Enterprises. 2- Households. 3- Individuals.

    Universe

    The survey covered all enterprises engaging up to 50 people including the working proprietors and unpaid family workers. A number of activities have been excluded from the investigations because they were of lower priority in relation to the focus of the research project. This means that the definition of MSEs refers to enterprises consisting of a person producing accessories for sale in the market, as well as factories with 30 or 40 workers. Both formal and informal enterprises falling within the MSE universe were the subject of investigations.

    Kind of data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Sampling procedure

    The sampling was national in coverage and is chosen by stratified, multi-stage systematic sampling method by the TURKSTAT. In Stage 1, 19 provinces were selected from 5 strata11 that were stratified in terms of socio-economic development level of the provinces compiled by the State Planning Organization (SPO). The selection of provinces from each stratum was carried out by weighted probability regarding the number of enterprises in each province. In stage 2, 432 PSUs with a minimum of 45 enterprises in urban areas of the 19 provinces were selected based on census of buildings for the year 2000 by the SIS, and 100 villages were selected in the rural area.

    Urban areas: Settlements with population over 20,000. These settlements include the central city of the province and district centers (ilce) with a population over 20,000. Rural areas: Villages with a population between 500 and 2,000.

    Some of the sample villages visited during the survey selected by the TURKSTAT, were more or less deserted and usually had only one grocery shop as an enterprise. But this was not always clearly reflected in the Population Census. This is because the municipalities receive their budget from the central administration in proportion to their population. Thus in order to compensate for the dearth of population in the villages, most of the municipalities arrange bus trips for migrants living in the big cities like Istanbul, taking them to their home towns and villages during the national census in order to increase their allowances from the public sources. The persistence of this practice means that the population of some villages is not reflected accurately in the population census. They are usually inflated.

    ===============================================================================================================

    A more detailed description of the different sampling stages and allocation of sample across governorates is provided in Appendix 5 in the full report available among external resources.

    Sampling deviation

    Due to the lack of a nation-wide survey of establishments for both rural and urban areas, the selection of villages was carried out without a reliable stratification process. It was decided to exclude the rural enterprises from the sample before the weighting and extrapolating process. The rural MSEs interviewed could be evaluated separately from the urban MSEs that constitute a representative sample of MSEs for the urban areas.

    Mode of data collection

    Face-to-face [f2f]

    Research instrument

    The questionnaire used in the main survey included four different forms:

    Form I. The enterprise list, used for listing all the enterprises within the PSU9 to identify the enterprise, entrepreneur, and associated household. All members of the enterprise universe were included in the first listing (identifying nature of enterprise), but those in excluded activities were not given the Form II used in the main survey.

    Exclusion rules concern agricultural and non-market activities, illegal activities, production for own personal use, mobile vendors, domestic services, professional services (except ICT) and enterprises with 50 and more persons engaged.

    Sampling rule designed to under-sample smaller sizes and men entrepreneurs Entrepreneur women: (size 1=>1/5; size 2-9 =>1/1; size 10-49=>1/1) Entrepreneur men: (size 1=>1/10; size 2-9 =>1/2; size 10-49=>1/1)

    The size 1 enterprises were deliberately under-sampled to avoid dominating the sample by enterprises size 1, and therefore have statistically significant number of enterprises in the sample for the larger size. The over sampling of enterprises with women entrepreneurs was necessary in order to ensure that the sample included sufficient number of women entrepreneurs to obtain statistically significant results.

    Form II. Household roster-enterprise identification. This type of questionnaire included identification variables for the members of the household and possible MSEs at home.

    Form III. Enterprise-entrepreneur questionnaire focused on characteristics of the entrepreneur and enterprise. Form III contained 322 questions related to the characteristics of the entrepreneur and the enterprise, growth performance, access to credit, financial and business services, relations with business associations, status of registration, level of technology, value of

  15. Illegal immigrants in the U.S. 2019, by state

    • statista.com
    Updated Jun 23, 2025
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    Statista (2025). Illegal immigrants in the U.S. 2019, by state [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/629682/state-populations-of-illegal-immigrants-in-the-united-states-2014/
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 23, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Time period covered
    2019
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    In 2019, California had the highest population of unauthorized immigrants, at around **** million. The overall figure for the United States was estimated to be around ***** million unauthorized immigrants.

  16. b

    Bildungsniveau

    • ldf.belgif.be
    Updated Aug 4, 2024
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    (2024). Bildungsniveau [Dataset]. https://ldf.belgif.be/datagovbe?subject=http%3A%2F%2Fdata.gov.be%2Fdataset%2Fstatbelpubs%2F465934b41b8d21d80f868c874008484c3926751d
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 4, 2024
    Variables measured
    http://publications.europa.eu/resource/authority/data-theme/ECON
    Description

    Doel en korte beschrijving van de Census De Census 2021 is een momentopname van de bevolking die in BelgiĂ« woont op 1 januari 2021. De Census levert een breed scala aan cijfers op over de woningen en de demografische, socio-economische en onderwijskundige kenmerken van de burgers. Het doel van de Census is dubbel: beantwoorden aan de Europese verordening[1] en statistieken produceren voor specifieke nationale noden (openbaar bestuur, internationale organisaties, onderzoekers, ondernemingen en particulieren). Vroeger was de Census een exhaustieve enquĂȘte onder alle burgers, maar sinds 2011 is deze uitsluitend gebaseerd op administratieve databanken. Definities De verschillende statistische eenheden De bevolking De bevolking in de Census 2021 is de residentiĂ«le bevolking zoals ingeschreven in het Rijksregister van de natuurlijke personen (RRNP) op 1 januari 2021. De Belgische bevolking omvat Belgen en niet-Belgen die toegelaten of gemachtigd zijn om zich te vestigen of om te verblijven op het grondgebied, maar omvat niet de niet-Belgen die minder dan drie maanden op het grondgebied verblijven, de asielzoekers en de niet-Belgen in onregelmatige situatie[2]. Particuliere huishoudens Deze groep omvat personen die alleen wonen, of meerdere personen die samenwonen en samen voorzien in hun levensonderhoud. Familiekernen Een familiekern bestaat uit twee of meer personen die deel uitmaken van hetzelfde huishouden en die verwant zijn als man en vrouw, als partners in een geregistreerd partnerschap, als samenwonende partners of als ouder en kind. Woonverblijven Dit omvat alle verblijven die dienen als onderkomen voor een of meerdere personen. Conventionele woningen Conventionele woningen worden gedefinieerd als structureel gescheiden, onafhankelijke ruimten die bestemd zijn voor permanente menselijke bewoning. Op de dag van de telling kunnen ze ofwel bewoond worden, ofwel leeg staan, ofwel als vakantieverblijf of tweede verblijfplaats dienen. Bewoonde conventionele woningen Het gaat om conventionele woningen die dienen als gewone verblijfplaats voor één of meerdere particuliere huishoudens. Definitie van de variabelen Geslacht Deze variabele wordt gebruikt om mannen van vrouwen te onderscheiden. Leeftijd De leeftijd wordt aangeduid in verstreken jaren op 1 januari 2021. Gewone verblijfplaats De verblijfplaats is diegene die geregistreerd staat in het Rijksregister op 1 januari 2021. Het gaat dus om de wettelijke verblijfplaats. De Belgische gemeenten werden tussen 2011 en 2021 gewijzigd. In de vergelijkingen op deze site werden de cijfers van 2011 uitgesplitst volgens de gemeenten in 2021. Agglomeratie Een agglomeratie is een aaneengesloten bebouwd gebied, d.w.z. een gebied dat gedefinieerd wordt door een groep mensen die in bij elkaar gelegen of aan elkaar grenzende gebouwen wonen. Deze zone bestaat uit een groep gebouwen waarbij geen enkel gebouw meer dan 200 meter van het naaste naburige gebouw verwijderd is. De Belgische gemeenten werden tussen 2011 en 2021 gewijzigd. In de vergelijkingen op deze site werden de cijfers van 2011 uitgesplitst volgens de gemeenten in 2021. Onderwijsniveau Dit is het hoogst behaalde onderwijsniveau dat men met succes heeft voltooid. Studiegebied Het studiegebied van het diploma wordt ingedeeld volgens de nomenclatuur ISCED-F 2013 (https://statbel.fgov.be/nl/open-data/code-isced-f-2013-4-cijfers) Opmerking Vergelijken met de vorige Census vereist enige voorzichtigheid, aangezien deze publicatie zich baseert op de Belgische bevolking en de Census op de Europese definitie van de bevolking. Meer info over verschil tussen de Belgische bevolking en de Census of Europese bevolking. Ook vergelijkingen met enquĂȘteresultaten zoals de EAK (EnquĂȘte naar de Arbeidskrachten) gebieden enige voorzichtigheid. De resultaten gepresenteerd in het kader van de voorbereiding van de Census geven het hoogste onderwijsniveau volgens de beschikbare administratieve gegevens weer, terwijl de EAK-cijfers gebaseerd zijn op een enquĂȘte waarin gepeild wordt naar het hoogste onderwijsniveau van (een steekproef van) respondenten. Beide bronnen hebben hun eigen kenmerken en hebben zowel voor- als nadelen. Zo heeft de EAK minder te kampen met het probleem van ontbrekende waarden op het onderwijsniveau, zoals bv. diploma's behaald in het buitenland, maar kunnen er dan weer meetfouten en andere vormen van vertekening optreden die eigen zijn aan dit soort enquĂȘtes. Het grote voordeel van de huidige administratieve gegevens is dan weer dat de cijfers op zeer gedetailleerd niveau beschikbaar zijn en daardoor ook gekoppeld kunnen worden aan andere administratieve bronnen. Meer gedetailleerde informatie over de specifieke verschillen tussen beide bronnen is op aanvraag beschikbaar bij Statbel. Metadata Metadata voor het thema "onderwijs" Vergelijking onderwijsniveau in EAK en Census Vergelijking onderwijsniveau in EAK en census - Samenvatting [1] UITVOERINGSVERORDENING (EU) 2017/543 VAN DE COMMISSIE van 22 maart 2017 houdende uitvoeringsbepalingen van Verordening (EG) nr. 763/2008 van het Europees Parlement en de Raad betreffende volks- en woningtellingen, wat de technische specificaties voor de thema's en voor de uitsplitsingen daarvan betreft. [2]Meer informatie over de manier waarop deze bevolking wordt bepaald

  17. g

    Einstellung zur VolkszÀhlung (Panel: 1. Welle, April-Mai 1987)

    • search.gesis.org
    Updated Apr 13, 2010
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    GrĂ€f, Lorenz; KĂŒhnel, Steffen M.; Scheuch, Erwin K. (2010). Einstellung zur VolkszĂ€hlung (Panel: 1. Welle, April-Mai 1987) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.1588
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    application/x-spss-por(1495727), application/x-stata-dta(795093), application/x-spss-sav(843328)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 13, 2010
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS search
    GESIS Data Archive
    Authors
    GrĂ€f, Lorenz; KĂŒhnel, Steffen M.; Scheuch, Erwin K.
    License

    https://www.gesis.org/en/institute/data-usage-termshttps://www.gesis.org/en/institute/data-usage-terms

    Variables measured
    IDNR -, LFDNR -, P1001 -, P1002 -, P1003 -, P1004 -, P1005 -, P1006 -, P1007 -, P1008 -, and 258 more
    Description

    Attitude of the German population and of census critics to the census before census day, 31 May 1987. Political attitudes.

    Topics: political interest; satisfaction with democracy in the Federal Republic; feeling of political effectiveness and degree of representation by politicians and parties; orientation of government policies on personal interest or public welfare; attitude to the census; intent to participate of members of household and respondent; willingness to participate after reference to threat of fine; filling out the survey questionnaire oneself or by another person in household; conversations about the census in social surroundings and time of last conversation; attitude to the census in circle of friends and acquaintances as well as their willingness to participate; importance of political attitudes in social surroundings and visibility of oneÂŽs own views; knowledge about contents of the census survey (scale); assumed difficulty of filling out the survey questionnaire; preference for filling it out in the presence of the canvasser or alone; misgivings about canvassers in residence; difficulties in taking care of official matters; frequency of contact and ability to establish contacts; trust in institutions and organizations; self-assessment on a left-right continuum; assumed position of the majority of the population on a left-right continuum; postmaterialism; sympathy scale for political parties; frequency of use of television news broadcasts as well as local news and political part of a daily newspaper; time of last noticed media reports about the census and tendency of content of these articles; assumed attitude of the population to the census; living together with a partner and his attitude to the census; assumed participation of partner in the census; response or boycott behavior during the census survey; attitude to government statistics; attitude to punishment of census boycotters and preferred government behavior regarding refusals; personal concerns regarding misuse of personal census data; trust in observance of data protection; sympathy regarding social movements as well as personal membership; party preference; perceived fears and their causes; attitude to technology; attitude to computers and to scientific innovations; attitude to government behavior with data; assessment of census refusers as system opponents; attitude to storing personal data; importance of data protection and trust in observance of the data protection regulation; judgement on the quality of data protection; earlier participation in a survey and type of survey; attitude to selected infringements of law and crimes as well as other illegal actions (scale); religiousness; union membership; self-assessment of social class; possession of a telephone; willingness to participate in a re-interview.

    The following additional questions were posed to persons with strong or very strong political interest: demographic information on close circle of friends (ego-centered network); agreement with the respondent regarding party preference and attitude to the census; willingness of friends to participate in the census; familiarity of friends with each other; personal willingness to participate in selected political forms of protest (scale); personal concerns regarding misuse of personal data by selected institutions and government offices.

    Demography: month of birth; year of birth; sex; marital status; number of children; ages of children (classified); religious denomination; frequency of church attendance; school education; vocational training; occupation; occupational position; employment; monthly gross income of respondent and household altogether; number of persons contributing to household income; size of household; position of respondent in household; characteristics of head of household; number of persons eligible to vote in household; persons in household who do not have German citizenship; self-assessment of social class; union membership of respondent and other members of household; possession of a telephone.

    Interviewer rating: presence of third persons during interview and person desiring this presence; intervention of others in interview and person introducing this intervention; attitude to the census of additional persons present during interview; presence of further persons in other rooms; willingness to cooperate and reliability of respondent.

    Also encoded was: length of interview; date of interview; identification of ...

  18. Daman & Diu Population density

    • knoema.es
    csv, json, sdmx, xls
    Updated Dec 9, 2024
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    Knoema (2024). Daman & Diu Population density [Dataset]. https://knoema.es/atlas/India/Daman-and-Diu/Population-density
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    json, xls, csv, sdmxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 9, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Knoemahttp://knoema.com/
    Time period covered
    1951 - 2011
    Area covered
    Daman And Diu, India
    Variables measured
    Population density
    Description

    2.191 (People per square kilometer) in 2011. Notes: a. Includes estimated population of Paomata, Mao Maram and Purul sub-divisions of Senapati District of Manipur for 2001. b. For working out the density of India and Jammu & Kashmir the entire area and population of those portions of Jammu & Kashmir which are under illegal occupation of Pakistan and China have not been taken into account. c. India figures include estimated figures for those of the three sub-divisions viz. Mao Maram, Paomata and Purul of Senapati district of Manipur as population census 2001 in these three subdivisions were cancelled due to technical and administrative reasons although a population census was carried out in this sub-division as per schedule.

  19. U.S. percentage of foreign-born population 2023, by state

    • statista.com
    Updated Nov 7, 2024
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    Statista (2024). U.S. percentage of foreign-born population 2023, by state [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/312701/percentage-of-population-foreign-born-in-the-us-by-state/
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 7, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Time period covered
    2023
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    As of 2023, 27.3 percent of California's population were born in a country other than the United States. New Jersey, New York, Florida, and Nevada rounded out the top five states with the largest population of foreign born residents in that year. For the country as a whole, 14.3 percent of residents were foreign born.

  20. Karnataka Population density

    • ru.knoema.com
    csv, json, sdmx, xls
    Updated Dec 9, 2024
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    Knoema (2024). Karnataka Population density [Dataset]. https://ru.knoema.com/atlas/%D0%98%D0%BD%D0%B4%D0%B8%D1%8F/Karnataka/Population-density
    Explore at:
    json, xls, sdmx, csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 9, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Knoemahttp://knoema.com/
    Time period covered
    1951 - 2011
    Area covered
    Karnataka, India
    Variables measured
    Population density
    Description

    319 (People per square kilometer) ĐČ 2011. Notes: a. Includes estimated population of Paomata, Mao Maram and Purul sub-divisions of Senapati District of Manipur for 2001. b. For working out the density of India and Jammu & Kashmir the entire area and population of those portions of Jammu & Kashmir which are under illegal occupation of Pakistan and China have not been taken into account. c. India figures include estimated figures for those of the three sub-divisions viz. Mao Maram, Paomata and Purul of Senapati district of Manipur as population census 2001 in these three subdivisions were cancelled due to technical and administrative reasons although a population census was carried out in this sub-division as per schedule.

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(2024). Mikrocensus 1981, 2. quarter: Additional Questions for the Population Census 1981 - Dataset - B2FIND [Dataset]. https://b2find.eudat.eu/dataset/433467b1-f78f-562a-aae6-10bf5584b9bb

Mikrocensus 1981, 2. quarter: Additional Questions for the Population Census 1981 - Dataset - B2FIND

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Dataset updated
Feb 20, 2024
Description

This survey consists of 6 parts: - migration: data on migration, i.e. immigration and emigration of households or individual; this information is important for population forecasts and the evaluation of the development of the individual geographic area - handicaps: reasons for including questions on this topic are the “year of handicapped persons” (1981), proclaimed by the UN and paying attentions to these questions from a statistical point of view; the questions had already been posed in September 1987 (Mikrozensus MZ7803) - additional occupation: these questions should give information on additional occupation of employed and unemployed persons; of course the Mikrozensus can only document legal additional occupation, not illegal employment - social stratification: questions on occupational stratum and the receiving of benefit payments serve the in-depth analysis of the other questions - income: the currently available income data in Austria do not allow the representation of the population according to the total income of one person and according to the income of the household; a detailed income survey is not possible in the Mikrozensus: the question program on income is limited to a single question and self-employed, as well as persons helping in the family business are not interviewed. - birth-biography and desire to have children: these questions were for the most part already posed in June 1967 (Mikrozensus MZ7602).

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