2010: Itīs time to be counted
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  2010: Itīs time to be counted
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Author Topic: 2010: Itīs time to be counted  (Read 1039 times)
Tender Branson
Mark Warner 08
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« on: December 27, 2009, 12:42:52 PM »

Next year (and 2011) most nations on this planet will conduct their decennial population censuses, among them many of the most populated nations. Hereīs an overview:

China (2010): went from 1.134 Mio. in 1990 to 1.266 Mio. in 2000 (+132)
India (2011): went from 846 Mio. in 1991 to 1.029 Mio. in 2000 (+183)
USA (2010): went from 249 Mio. in 1990 to 281 Mio. in 2000 (+32)
Indonesia (2010): went from 179 Mio. in 1990 to 205 Mio. in 2000 (+26)
Brazil (2010): went from 147 Mio. in 1991 to 170 Mio. in 2000 (+23)
Pakistan (2010): went from 84 Mio. in 1981 to 132 Mio. in 1998 (+48)
Bangladesh (2011): went from 106 Mio. in 1991 to 124 Mio. in 2001 (+18)
Nigeria (2006): went from 89 Mio. in 1991 to 140 Mio. in 2006 (+51)
Russia (2010): went from 147 Mio. in 1989 to 145 Mio. in 2002 (-2)
Japan (2010): went from 126 Mio. in 1995 to 128 Mio. in 2005 (+2)

Mexico (2010)
Philippines (2010)
Vietnam (2009)
Ethiopia (2007)
Egypt (2006)
Germany (2011)
Turkey (2010 or 2011)
Congo (DR): From what Iīve read in 2010 or 2011, no Census for 26 years now
Iran (2006)
Thailand (2010)

France (2010)
UK (2011)
Italy (2011)
South Africa (2011)
South Korea (2010)
Myanmar: no clue, the last one was in 1983
Colombia (2006)
Ukraine (2011)
Sudan (2008)
Tanzania (2012)

Already looking forward to the results.
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Hash
Hashemite
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« Reply #1 on: December 27, 2009, 01:06:09 PM »

France's 2010 census is a partial census, in a fifth of small communities (iirc) and surveying 8% of large community inhabitants. New legal populations come out every January, so there will be new numbers in January 2010 and 2011.

Canada has a full census in 2011, which will include a religion question unlike in 2006. Religion is asked every 10 years.
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Tender Branson
Mark Warner 08
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« Reply #2 on: December 27, 2009, 02:59:11 PM »

Some African countries have already conducted their counts and they are still growing very fast - in the 2% to 4% range. The only outlier is Lesotho, where there was basically no change between 1996 and 2006, because the country is heavily hit by HIV/AIDS.

Other countries include:

Mozambique: from 16.1 Mio. in 1997 to 20.2 Mio. in 2007 (+26%)
Ethiopia: from 53.5 Mio. in 1994 to 73.9 Mio. in 2007 (+38%)
Malawi: from 9.9 Mio. in 1998 to 13.1 Mio. in 2008 (+32%)
Algeria: from 29.1 Mio. in 1998 to 34.8 Mio. in 2008 (+20%)
Sudan: from 25.6 Mio. in 1993 to 39.2 Mio. in 2008 (+53%)
Mali: from 10.2 Mio. in 1998 to 14.5 Mio. in 2009 (+43%)

Philippines: from 76.5 Mio. in 2000 to 88.6 Mio. in 2007 (+16%)
Cambodia: from 11.4 Mio. in 1998 to 13.4 Mio. in 2008 (+17%)
North Korea: from 20.5 Mio. in 1993 to 24.1 Mio. in 2008 (+17%)
Vietnam: from 76.3 Mio. in 1999 to 85.8 Mio. in 2009 (+13%)

Additionally, Iraq and Afghanistan will conduct a population census in 2010.
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Jens
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« Reply #3 on: December 28, 2009, 10:29:38 AM »

Denmark hasn't had a census in 40 years.
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ilikeverin
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« Reply #4 on: December 28, 2009, 11:41:22 AM »

Make sure to be very accurate when filling out census forms for future genealogists Smiley
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danny
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« Reply #5 on: December 28, 2009, 12:19:46 PM »

Israel already had its one last year:

from 5.548 Mio. in 1995 to 7.407 Mio. in 2008 (+25%)
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Tender Branson
Mark Warner 08
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« Reply #6 on: January 01, 2010, 10:34:57 AM »

Kenya's numbers from the 2009 Census will be released later next week.

Should be around 37-38 Mio., compared with 28.7 Mio. in 1999 (+2.5% each year)
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Tender Branson
Mark Warner 08
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« Reply #7 on: January 06, 2010, 01:31:50 PM »

Kenya's numbers from the 2009 Census will be released later next week.

Should be around 37-38 Mio., compared with 28.7 Mio. in 1999 (+2.5% each year)

Or not:

http://www.capitalfm.co.ke/news/Kenyanews/Kenya-delays-census-results-7014.html
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Хahar 🤔
Xahar
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« Reply #8 on: January 06, 2010, 04:25:21 PM »

Bangladesh (2011): went from 106 Mio. in 1991 to 124 Mio. in 2001 (+18)

Pity.
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Tender Branson
Mark Warner 08
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« Reply #9 on: January 17, 2010, 03:48:15 AM »

Iraq to hold first full census since '87 in October

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Plans are on track to take Iraq's first complete census in 23 years, a process that will help answer questions critical to the future of Iraq's northern oilfields, such as "how many Kurds live in Kirkuk?

The long-delayed count, which may shut down the country for two days in October, is also expected to determine how many Iraqis live abroad and how many have been forced to move within Iraq in seven years of war, census chief Mehdi al-Alak said.

The census was postponed for a year over worries it was being politicized. Ethnic groups in contested areas like the northern city of Kirkuk, home to Arabs, Kurds, Turkmen and a valuable part of Iraq's oil fields, opposed it because it might reveal demographics that would undermine political ambitions.

The count could provide answers or create more squabbles in a diverse nation riven by sectarian violence following the U.S. invasion in 2003 and now trying to bolster fragile security gains while deciding how to share out its vast oil wealth. Iraq has the world's 3rd largest crude oil reserves.

The autonomous Kurdish region in the north claims Kirkuk as its own. The census will determine whether Kurds are the biggest ethnic bloc in the city, which could bolster that claim.

It will also find out how many people live in Iraqi Kurdistan, which will define its slice of central government revenues, currently 17 percent. If the census finds Kurds are a greater percentage of the total population, the constitution says the region gets more money, and retroactive payments.

NUMBERS, NOT POLITICS

What it won't do, Alak said, is attempt to determine which of the hotly disputed areas belong to whom.

"It is not our business to decide their destiny," Alak, the head of the Central Organization for Statistics and Information Technology (COSIT), said in an interview this week. "We count the people in the province where they live. Deciding the destiny of the areas is the business of the politicians."

The census will be the first to include the Kurdish region since 1987. A 1997 census counted 19 million Iraqis and officials estimated there were another 3 million in the Kurdish north.

The current national population is believed to be "not less than 30 million," Alak said.

"We started three months ago the listing and mapping process that is the backbone of our work," he said. "We have initial numbers of houses, buildings, families, and individuals."

The census will show the religious makeup of a predominantly Muslim nation but will deliberately not ask a resident's sect. Sectarian fighting has killed tens of thousands since Saddam Hussein's minority Sunni-led regime was deposed and majority Shi'ites gained political power.

"He or she would say Muslim, Christian, Sabian, Yazidi, but the form doesn't contain sect questions like Sunni or Shi'ite," Alak said. "It is very sensitive now because of our circumstances. (To ask this question) is not recommended." Between 200,000 and 250,000 schoolteachers will be trained this summer and mustered in the last week of October to carry out the count. The exact date has not been set.

The teachers will be joined by 10,000 to 15,000 other government workers, as well as security forces to protect them in restive areas like Nineveh province, where remnants of al Qaeda are still in evidence.

All Iraqis will be ordered to stay home for one and possibly two days, a census tradition in Iraq, Alak said. Enumerators will go to each of the estimated 5 million households to count heads, examine identification, ask about education and profession and register rates of births and deaths.

Alak said Iraq's total population should be known about 15 days after census day, but more specific demographics will take about 10 months to tally.

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE60F0ZL20100116
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