State Legislative District Summary Files, 2000

State Legislative District Summary Files, 2000
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2007
Genre: Election districts
ISBN:

"Files provide Census 2000 data summaries for two types of state legislative district (SLD) boundaries: upper chamber and lower chamber. Statistics on 100-percent and sample population and housing subjects are presented for all states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. For Nebraska, which has a unicameral legislature, data are presented as upper chamber only. For the District of Columbia, data also are presented as upper chamber only. Geographic areas within SLD are county, county subdivision, place, state portion of American Indian and Alaska Native area, and Hawaiian home land. States provided updated boundaries in 2005/2006 as part of Phase 1 of the 2010 Census Redistricting Data Program. Please note that the state legislative districts shown in these files reflect the redistricting that occured following Census 2000 and therefore differ from those shown in the Census 2000 Redistricting Data (Public Law 94-171) Summary File. The 100-Percent File contains data collected for all people and housing units, as reflected by the Census 2000 short-form questionnaire (PDF - 424 KB) covers the same basic subject characteristics as Summary File 1. The Sample File contains data from a sample of approximately 19 million housing units (about 1 in 6 households) that received the Census 2000 long-form questionnaire (PDF - 627KB) covers the same detailed subject characteristics as Summary File 3"--U.S. Census Bureau Web site.

History, 2000 Census of Population and Housing: Census geography and the geographic support system

History, 2000 Census of Population and Housing: Census geography and the geographic support system
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 416
Release: 2009
Genre: Census of population and housing (2000)
ISBN:

From Book's Preface: Contains summary population totals for the United States, Puerto Rico, and the Island areas and for major race groups and an overview of political, statistical, and technological context in which the census took place. Describes preparations for the census, including lessons learned from the 1990 census, consultations with governmental and other data users, recommendations from the National Academy of Sciences and other advisory groups, and the plans for and results of census tests conducted between 1992 and 1998. Summarizes the history of each question on the short and long forms, the response categories, data uses, and any associated editing, allocation, and coding instructions. Reviews evaluations and recommendations from the 1990 program, the decision to use paid advertising in Census 2000, developing and implementing an integrated marketing strategy, components of the partnership program, and a series of special initiatives. Describes the organization and distribution of regional census centers and local census offices, the hiring and training of temporary field staff, the hardware and software used to track and assess census progress, and the different components of the enumeration process. Summarizes the decision to hire contractors to conduct data capture and manage the data capture centers, the hardware and software used to capture census data, the headquarters tabulation process, identification and deletion of duplicates, editing and imputation, intermediate data files, and the creation of the 100 percent and sample detail files. Covers such topics as data collection and tabulation geography, mapping, creating and updating the census address list, data products and their dissemination, the experimental and evaluation programs, legislation, litigation, the debate over sampling, and the census in Puerto Rico and the Island Areas.

The 2000 Census

The 2000 Census
Author: National Research Council
Publisher: National Academies Press
Total Pages: 248
Release: 2002-01-07
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0309170354

This volume contains the full text of two reports: one is an interim review of major census operations, which also assesses the U.S. Census bureau's recommendation in March 2001 regarding statistical adjustment of census data for redistricting. It does not address the decision on adjustment for non-redistricting purposes. The second report consists of a letter sent to William Barron, acting director of the Census Bureau. It reviews the new set of evaluations prepared by the Census Bureau in support of its October decision. The two reports are packaged together to provide a unified discussion of statistical adjustment and other aspects of the 2000 census that the authoring panel has considered to date.