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Agency History
Learn more about our facilities, our innovations, and the who played a role in shaping the U.S. Census Bureau.
Census Records & Family History
The United States has collected data about its population since 1790 and continues to collect data every 10 years. Learn how to find previous census records.
Historical Censuses & Surveys
Learn how the census expanded over time from a simple headcount in 1790, to over 200 different surveys today.
Galleries & Archives
View publications, maps, and more that provide information about the history of the Census Bureau and its programs.

The History of Privacy and Confidentiality at the U.S. Census Bureau

The strong culture of confidentiality at the Census Bureau has grown and evolved over time, shaped by a growing sense of a right to privacy among the people of the United States. The final result of this build-up is the confidentiality protections that are codified in Title 13 of U.S. Code, the rules governing Census Bureau activity today.

This was not always the case. Early census questionnaires were public; the authorizing legislation for the 1790 census actually required that they be posted in a public place so that people could check the accuracy of their entry. Throughout the nineteenth century, the director of the census was informally entrusted with ensuring the confidentiality of both companies and individuals responding to the survey, but by the early twentieth century, presidential proclamations formally recognized the need for privacy.

During World War I and World War II, changes in federal law led to the roll-back of many protections on Census Bureau data. After each war, these privacy protections were restored.

The Census Bureau produced a monograph on Privacy and Confidentiality in July 2001.

For a chronologically arranged table, see Events in the Chronological Development of Privacy and Confidentiality at the U.S. Census Bureau.

Working papers related to statistical safeguards and disclosure avoidance can be found at the Disclosure Avoidance Working Papers Web site.

Page Last Revised - February 26, 2024
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