Showing 1 – 3 of 3 results.
Curated
Integrated Public Use Microdata Series: North Atlantic Population Project (ICPSR 35985)
Released/updated on: 2015-06-18
Geographic coverage: Canada, Sweden, Great Britain, United States, Norway, Ireland, Egypt, Denmark, Mexico, Germany, Iceland, Albania
The North Atlantic Population Project (NAPP), which was created by research teams in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden, is a massive integrated cross-national microdatabase that provides a baseline for studies of demographic change. This project improves the NAPP by tripling the size of the database to approximately 365 million records by adding 40 new datasets for the period 1787 to 1930 from Albania, Great Britain, Canada, Denmark, Egypt, Iceland, Ireland, Germany, Norway, Mexico, Sweden, and the United States. It also creates linked national panels and merges NAPP with the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series (IPUMS). NAPP provides a baseline for the study of changes in demography and health of European and North American populations. In each country, it provides the earliest census microdata available. It makes available some of the world's largest and longest-running cross-sectional and longitudinal data sources.
Curated
IPUMS 1930 Sample: Competing Continuation (ICPSR 36001)
Released/updated on: 2015-06-19
Geographic coverage: United States
This project expands a microdata sample of the 1930 census from 1,222,727 cases to approximately 6,200,361 cases, representing five percent of the population.
Curated
Population Database for the United States in 1880 (ICPSR 35998)
Released/updated on: 2015-06-18
Geographic coverage: United States
This project expands the Population Database of the United States in 1880. It adds previously missing information on health, education, employment, non-family relationships, and nuptiality to a ten-percent sample of the 1880 non-Hispanic White population, and a twenty-percent sample of households containing Blacks, American Indians, Chinese, and Hispanics. It also creates linked representative samples of individuals and family groups from the censuses of 1860, 1870, 1900, and 1910 to the 1880 census.