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Random Samplings

The U.S. Census Bureau is the leading source of data about the population and economy of the United States. While the Census Bureau is best known for conducting a national headcount once every 10 years, the agency is continually conducting surveys that provide data about a variety of social and economic conditions.

Experts from around the Census Bureau will use Random Samplings to describe the objectives of their work and explain census and survey results. We hope this blog will increase awareness and use of the valuable data collected by the Census Bureau, and make this data more accessible to all users.

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Random Samplings Blog
Random Samplings: Immigrant Families and Educational Attainment
How do the foreign born and their children influence educational attainment statistics?


Random Samplings Blog
The Foreign-Born by Urban-Rural Status of Counties: 2011-2015
According to the latest Census Bureau data, the foreign-born population, or anyone who is not a U.S. citizen at birth, comprised 13.2 percent of the overall U.S. population between 2011-2015.


Random Samplings Blog
Immigrant Voting in the United States
In recent decades, immigration has driven population growth more than natural increase. Therefore, it is useful to examine the degree to which immigration status shapes the voting-eligible population, or “electorate.”


Random Samplings Blog
Out of Africa: Recent Growth of the African Foreign-Born Population
Experts from the Census Bureau describe the objectives of their work and explain census and survey results. The bureau conducts more than 100 surveys each year.


Random Samplings Blog
Measuring the Foreign-Born Population and Immigration
Census Bureau statistics can be used to answer many questions about the foreign-born population in the United States.


Random Samplings Blog
Faster vs. Bigger: Size and Growth of the Foreign-Born from Asia and Latin America
Rapid Growth Doesn’t Necessarily Trump a Big Population Base. The foreign-born population from Asia increased over the last decade – from 8.2 million in 2000 to 11.6 million in 2011 – and now represents more than one-fourth (29 percent) of all immigrants in the United States.

Page Last Revised - December 5, 2023
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