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This page contains population-related working papers released by the U.S. Census Bureau.
View more working papers.
WORKING PAPER | JULY 09, 2018
2020 Census Barriers, Attitudes and Motivators Survey Usability Test
Usability testing of the internet version of the 2020 Census Barriers, Attitudes, and Motivators Survey (CBAMS).
WORKING PAPER | JULY 2018
How Well Does the Current Population Survey Measure the Composition...
Gender, Work Context and Nonstandard Work Schedules Among Parents
This paper uses SIPP 2014 to analyze parents working a nonstandard schedule.
WORKING PAPER | APRIL 27, 2018
Puerto Rican-Origin Children’s Living Arrangements
This poster examines family, social and demographic characteristics of Puerto Rican-origin children in Puerto Rico and the United States in 2006 and 2015.
WORKING PAPER | APRIL 26, 2018
Examining Change in Interracial/Interethnic Married-Couple Households
This poster examines geographic change in the prevalence of interracial and interethnic married-couple households from 2000 to 2012-2016.
What is Associated with Providing Fixed Internet Service?
In this poster, we use merged administrative and survey data to identify factors associated with Internet Service Providers (ISPs) providing internet service.
Unpacking Earnings of the Foreign-Born Workforce
Integrating Survey Respondents: Leveraging Existing Household Survey
This poster describes a new innovative project that harmonizes and integrates survey data overtime and across surveys.
Family and Household Composition After the Great Recession
This poster examines the relationship between the 100 most populous metropolitan statistical areas’ economic well-being and family and household measures.
WORKING PAPER | APRIL 02, 2018
Interracial and Inter-ethnic Marriage and Self-Rated Health
Study explores the associations between partner race/ethnicity and health in the U.S. using the Survey of Income and Program Participation.
Policy and Evaluation of the US Census Bureau’s Statistics on Language
This article examines how and why the U.S. Census Bureau asks about language.
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