Example sentences of "the [num] census " in BNC.

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1 In this study , this was achieved by examining the estimated kilometre square populations together with those which were reported for the same areal units in the 1971 Census of Population .
2 First , they can be compared with the actual distribution of population as reported on a grid square basis by the 1971 Census of Population ( Fig. 5.11 ) .
3 Thirteen years , between the 1971 Census and the 1984 image used , is a long time and has encompassed considerable population change in both magnitude and distribution .
4 Using what would now be called GIS skills , Openshaw ( 1980 ) examined over 13 000 1 km grid squares in the UK which intersect the coastline and related these to data from the 1971 Census ( which were made available for such grid squares ) .
5 It should be pointed out , however , that the National Radiological Protection Board currently uses 1 km grid square resolution population data from the 1971 Census in its radiological protection studies ( Hallam et al. 1981 ) .
6 A longitudinal study by John Fox and Peter Goldblatt of City University , London , showed that men unemployed at the time of the 1971 census were much more likely to have died over the subsequent four years .
7 However , Grundy ( 1986 ) , using data from the OPCS Longitudinal Study which is based on a 1 per cent sample of the 1971 Census linked to records from the 1981 Census , reports a similar pattern .
8 When the 1971 Census asked a question about employment status , it found that about 40 per cent more people regarded themselves as unemployed than the official statistics showed .
9 Reporting on the decade of change following the 1971 Census , the CES found : first , in those areas under consideration , there has been a population decline of 20 per cent , whereas the population at large has grown .
10 For example , John Fox and Peter Goldblatt ( 1982 ) have shown that after controlling for age , mortality in the 5 years following the 1971 Census for men aged 15 to 64 was greater for the highest social class , professional workers , who were living in the local authority sector , than for the lowest social class , unskilled manual workers , in the owner-occupied sector ( see figure 7.9 ) .
11 Comparisons of the 1981 estimates ( derived using the 1971 Census as a starting point ) with the results from the 1981 Census showed some moderately large discrepancies .
12 The total population estimates for Districts in 1981 , based on updates from the 1971 Census , were generally accurate to within two per cent , but the error was in excess of five per cent in some cases ( Thatcher , 1985 ) .
13 Holtermann 's analysis of data from the 1971 census using six indicators of inadequate housing showed that urban conurbations , particularly Clydeside and London , contained a disproportionate amount of inadequate housing .
14 The 1971 census showed that the relevant postcode sector held almost the highest proportion ( 23% ) of residents not born in Scotland of any sector in the rural high oil worker category , and indeed one of the highest in Scotland .
15 For some fifteen years now researchers wishing to have special tabulations compiled from the 1961 census of England and Wales have been refused due to ‘ technical difficulties ’ , and more recently it has been discovered that the machine-readable ten per cent sample of the 1971 census for Scotland is no longer accessible ( Marsh 1980 ; Schürer 1985 ) .
16 Though this was a major achievement , the 1980 census still revealed marked differences by gender and region .
17 What is clear , however , is the widespread nature of the trend , not only in the USA which the 1980 Census confirmed , as shown in Figure 5.1 ( Cruickshank , 1981 ) , but also in Europe where Fielding ( 1982 ) concluded that in nearly all the countries of western Europe counterurbanization has replaced urbanization .
18 The thirty or so largest groups accounted for about seventy per cent of the total population in the 1948 census .
19 The 1861 census gives us the chance to meet Benjamin and Elizabeth at yet another new location : 7 St Thomas 's Street , Islington .
20 The 1861 census enumerator had caught the family at the height of its expansion ; 10 years later they were down to two children , one of whom would be leaving home very shortly .
21 In the area of closest scrutiny only 14 per cent of males ( 45/311 ) and 19 per cent of females ( 75/390 ) aged over ten at the time of the 1861 census were living in the same house as the one they had inhabited in 1851 ; but many of them had moved only a short distance .
22 These collieries were largely responsible for Dronfield 's early industrial development , for when the 1861 census was taken 383 men , or 48 per cent of the workforce , were employed in local mines .
23 As boarding-school heads assembled at Ambleside in the Lake District for their annual conference on May 4th-6th , the 1993 census by ISIS , the independent schools information service , showed that the number of boarders continues to fall .
24 The 1881 census tells the story : Charles F. Titford was a ‘ Potman and Tobacconist ’ , with Emily as his ‘ Assistant Tobacconist ’ and mother as a general ‘ Assistant ’ .
25 Brunswick Place itself was definitely rather an up-market location , as the 1881 census makes clear .
26 At the time of writing , the 1881 census is the latest to have been made available for public consultation because of the restriction imposed by the 100 years rule .
27 Mrs K. Battye 's local history class have mapped the information recorded in the 1881 census returns and have related much of it to existing buildings .
28 The time of year was chosen to be as close as possible to that of the 1979 census to ensure that seasonal mortality effects would not confound results .
29 Full details of the 1979 census have been published .
30 Most Soviet citizens , however , appeared to have remained loyal to their native language in their domestic and family life , and there was little sign of the disappearance of at least the major Soviet languages , most of which were still spoken by the great majority of the nationalities in question ( the 1979 census found that 62 per cent of non-Russians were fluent in that language , but that 93 per cent of the population identified their national language as their native one ; the 1989 census found that the reported level of knowledge of Russian had actually fallen among at least two national groups , the Uzbeks and Lithuanians ) .
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