Examples of United States Census in the following topics:
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- The graying of America has contributed to the higher concentration of the elderly in certain areas of the United States.
- According to the United States Census, about 12% of the American population is over the age of 65.
- However, the elderly are not evenly distributed throughout the United States .
- This is a map of the USA reflecting the percentage of the population over age 65 by census district based on Census 2000 data.
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- Over the past three decades, marriage rates in the United States have increased for all racial and ethnic groups.
- According to the United States Census Bureau, 2,077,000 marriages occurred in the United States in 2009.
- Marriage laws have changed over the course of United States history, including the removal of bans on interracial marriage.
- According to the United States Census Bureau, 2,077,000 marriages occurred in the United States in 2009.
- In the United States, the two ethnic groups with the highest marriage rates included Asians with 58.5%, and Whites with 52.9%.
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- Healthcare in the United States is provided by separate legal entities, often private facilities with governmental insurance for citizens.
- Healthcare in the United States is provided by many separate legal entities.
- The United States is alone among developed nations with the notable absence of a universal healthcare system.
- Currently, the United States has a higher infant mortality rate than most of the world's industrialized nations.
- According to the United States Census Bureau, in 2009, there were 50.7 million people in the United States (16.7% of the population) who were without health insurance.
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- The United States is a diverse country, racially and ethnically.
- The United States Census Bureau also classifies Americans as "Hispanic or Latino" and "Not Hispanic or Latino," which identifies Hispanic and Latino Americans as a racially diverse ethnicity that composes the largest minority group in the nation.
- In the twentieth century, efforts to sort the increasingly mixed population of the United States into discrete categories generated many difficulties for the U.S. government (Spickard, 1992).
- By the standards used in past censuses, many millions of mixed-race children born in the United States have been classified as of a different race than one of their biological parents.
- Especially in the southwest United States, people of Latino origin make up a significant proportion of United States residents.
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- Individual and household income remains one of the most prominent indicators of class status within the United States.
- Income in the United States is most commonly measured by U.S.
- Census Bureau in terms of either household or individual income and remains one of the most prominent indicators of class status.
- In the United States, the most widely cited personal income statistics are the Bureau of Economic Analysis's personal income and the Census Bureau's per capita money income.
- According to the US Census, men tend to have higher income than women, while Asians and whites earned more than African Americans and Hispanics.
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- Census Bureau collects data on income and poverty in the United States.
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- Indeed the United States is quite religiously diverse.
- Census does not ask about religion.
- According to the census, religion in the United States is comprised of Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, and the unaffiliated, including atheists or agnostics.
- It is estimated that about 10% of African slaves transported to the United States were Muslim.
- Religious symbols represented in this picture reflect the religious diversity in the United States.
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- In spite of these competing definitions, in the United States "urban" is officially defined following guidelines set by the U.S.
- Census Bureau.
- As of December, 2010, about 82% of the population of the United States lived within the boundaries of urbanized area.
- Combined, these areas occupy about 2% of the land area of the United States.
- The next five largest urban areas in the United States are Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, and Boston.
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- Many governments provide legal definitions of race for purposes of census-taking and calculating budgets for governmental programs.
- Census Bureau currently uses race and ethnicity as self-identification data items.
- In many countries, such as France, the state is legally banned from maintaining data based on race, so the police issue wanted notices to the public that include labels like "dark skin complexion. "
- In the United States, the practice of racial profiling has been ruled to be both unconstitutional and a violation of civil rights.
- Census Bureau.
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- According to the 2010 census of the US Census Bureau blacks (including Hispanic blacks) comprised 13.6% of the US population.
- Hispanics comprised 16.3% of the US population according to the 2010 US census.
- In the United States, "jail" and "prison" refer to separate levels of incarceration; generally speaking, jails are county or city administrated institutions which house both inmates awaiting trial on the local level, and convicted misdemeanants serving a term of one year or less, while prisons are state or federal facilities housing convicted felons serving a term of more than one year.
- The United States has the highest documented incarceration rate in the world (743 per 100,000 population).
- According to the 2010 census of the U.S.