Looking
for the Last Percent
Price: $22.00
Subtitle: The Controversy over Census
Undercounts
Author: Harvey M. Choldin
Subject: Sociology/Public Policy
Paper ISBN 0-8135-2040-1
Pages: 296 pp.
Description:
Every census misses some people, but those who are poor,
male, urban, black, and Hispanic are most likely not to be counted. In
1980 and 1990, big city mayors complained that census undercounts were
depriving their communities of their correct representation in Congress
and of their fair share of state and federal dollars. The mayors filed
lawsuits to demand recounts and statistical corrections to the census.
Harvey Choldin tells the story of the conflict between Census Bureau
staff and politicians over how to handle the undercount.
Statisticians at the census bureau were caught between their
own rigorous scientific standards and these strong political demands.
Choldin explains the political and statistical issues in the undercount
controversy, and describes the major research and development program
in which statisticians developed innovative techniques with which to
measure and correct undercounts. He concludes by showing that, despite
the undercount, the United States has an excellent census.
Harvey M. Choldin is a professor of sociology at the
University of Illinois-Urbana and the author of Cities and Suburbs: An
Introduction to Urban Sociology and and co-editor of Sociological Human
Ecology.
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Price: $22.00
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