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Population/Demographics -
Migration - US (5 items) |
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- American Community Survey
- Residence one year ago (same/different house, county, state, nation) by age, race, citizenship status, educational attainment, income, poverty status, tenure.
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- Geographical Mobility - Current Populaton Survey (CPS)
- Tables are for United States and Census Regions. Detailed tables on the annual rate of moving, and the characteristics of movers and nonmovers by type of move, including: age, race, Hispanic origin, family relationship, tenure, educational attainment, labor force status, ocuupation and industry group. Inmigrants, Outmigrants, and Net Migration for Regions by selected characteristics. Reason for move by selected characteristics. Distance of intercounty move. Excel, text. 1995 - 2005. Historical Reports from 1947 in pdf
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- Historical Statistics of the United States: Millennial Edition
- Several internal migration time series including: Net intercensal migration, by race, nativity, and state: 1850–1990 [Survival rate method]; Net intercensal migration, by race and state: 1940–1990 [Components of change method], Population mobility - nonmovers and movers, by type of move: 1940–2000; interstate migration - native-born population, by race and residence within or outside the state of birth: 1850–1990; Change in the farm population through births, deaths, and migration: 1920–1970.
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- Migration Data - Census 2000
- Tables include: Migration for the Population 5 Years and Over for the United States, Regions, States, Counties, New England Minor Civil Divisions, Metropolitan Areas, and Puerto Rico: 2000; migration for the U.S and states by sex, age, nativity, race, hispanic origin; and county-to-county migration flows
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- Population Estimates Program
- The Population Estimates Program each year publishes domestic migration numbers for the U.S., states, counties, and metropolitan areas. Demographic components of change (births, deaths, domestic and international migration) are developed as inputs to the population estimates. Estimates of domestic migration are based on migration rates derived from summarized administrative data and the changes in group quarters population. National and state numbers are published at the end of the calendar year, county numbers are published in the following months.
The net international component combines three parts: (1) net migration of the foreign-born, (2) emigration of natives, and (3) net movement from Puerto Rico to the United States. Estimates of net international migration are derived using a variety of available data sources.
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