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Who Returned to New Orleans After Hurricane Katrina?

2010) Hurricane Katrina displaced almost the entire population of New Orleans in August 2005, scattering residents across the region, state, and country. By the fall of 2006, almost half the residents had returned, and almost two-thirds had returned by the fall of 2007.

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Child Marriage in the Middle East and North Africa

Child marriage is a human rights violation.

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PRB @ PAA 2024 Annual Meeting

Dates: April 17-20, 2024 Columbus, OH

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Q&A With Kyler Sherman-Wilkins

PRB spoke with him about his goals for the program and future implications for the study of demography.

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Black Students More Likely to Be Disciplined at School Than Whites

(2013) Suspensions, expulsions, and arrests are strong predictors of trouble for students. Students in trouble tend to drop out or not graduate on time, which can ultimately diminish their lifetime earnings—and will make them much more likely to be incarcerated than those who graduate.

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Project: PACE: Policy, Advocacy, and Communication Enhanced for Population and Reproductive Health

Lesson Plan: 2018 World Population Data Sheet

PRB’s World Population Data Sheet is an excellent reference and data analysis tool. Teachers are encouraged to have their students use the Data Sheet for a variety of topics and activities.

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Eight Demographic Trends Transforming America’s Older Population

(2018) A new publication from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine identifies eight key demographic trends shaping the rapidly growing U.S. population ages 65 and older—projected to nearly double from 51 million in 2017 to 95 million by 2060.

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Project: PACE: Policy, Advocacy, and Communication Enhanced for Population and Reproductive Health

Lesson Plan. 2020 World Population Data Sheet (PDF)

(2020) PRB’s World Population Data Sheet is an excellent reference and data analysis tool. This series of short activities allows students to access a wealth of data on the world, regions, and individual countries, and develop their data literacy skills and knowledge of geography.

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New Fielding Methods and Innovations Are Planned for the 2020 Census

(2019) More than 300 million people live in the United States and getting an accurate count of each and every one of them is no easy feat. As the U.S. population has grown—from just under 4 million in 1790 to more than 329 million in 2019—the Census Bureau’s enumeration methods (how they count people) have evolved to adapt to new technologies, increase efficiency and accuracy, and help to control rising costs.

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Where Poverty and Inequality Intersect in the U.S.

Levels of income inequality depend on where you live—higher in California and parts of the Northeast and South, and lower in states in the Midwest and Mountain West.

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