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We the American...Foreign Born
This document profiles many of the demographics and nationalities represented within the United States population as of 1993. Details on education, income, and other appropriate information is included here to help properly portray America's immigrant population.
United States. Bureau of the Census
1993-09
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Census Data & Emergency Preparedness [website]
This website from the United States Census Bureau provides information regarding emergency preparedness. The website also contains information on recent emergency events such as Hurricanes Sandy, Isaac, and Irene, the 2011 Mississippi River Floods, and the wildfires of Southern California.
United States. Bureau of the Census
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OnTheMap for Emergency Management [map]
U.S. Census Bureau data for disasters, natural hazards, and weather events.
"OnTheMap for Emergency Management provides real-time access to a range of detailed U.S. Census Bureau data about the people living and working in areas being affected by hurricanes, floods, wildfires, winter storms, and federal disaster declaration areas.
Statistical data sources include 2010 Decennial Census data, 2008-2012 5-year American Community Survey (ACS) estimates, and 2011 LEHD Origin-Destination Employment Statistics (LODES)."
United States. Bureau of the Census
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National Coastal Population Report: Population Trends from 1970 to 2020
"Our nation's bountiful coastal resources have influenced American history and culture, and have drawn a substantial portion of our country's population to the coast. The concentration of people and economic activity at the coast places pressures on ecologically sensitive coastal ecosystems and also leaves residents and visitors vulnerable to coastal hazards, such as hurricanes, erosion, and sea level rise. One focus of this management challenge is to understand who lives at the coast and how this population is changing. However, this is not a simple matter as federal agencies, researchers, and non-governmental organizations define 'the coast' in various ways. To increase consistency in how we describe our nation's coastal population, this report presents the nation's coastal population in two different lights. One is the population that lives in Coastal Watershed Counties, or those counties where a substantial portion of their land area intersect coastal watersheds, and consequently represent where land use changes and water quality impacts most directly impact coastal ecosystems. NOAA [National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration] has historically reported population for Coastal Watershed Counties, and continues this framework in this report. For the first time, NOAA also presents the population that lives in a subset of Coastal Watershed Counties, the Coastal Shoreline Counties, or those counties directly adjacent to the open ocean, major estuaries, and the Great Lakes. The Coastal Shoreline Counties, due to their proximity to these waters, bear the most direct effects of coastal hazards and host the majority of economic production associated with coastal and ocean resources. This report offers two independent sections that present basic demographic status and trends information for Coastal Shoreline Counties and for Coastal Watershed Counties, allowing the coastal management community the opportunity to choose the appropriate statistics for their needs."
United States. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; United States. Bureau of the Census
2013-03
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