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  • Population Trends Journal Special Edition

    The latest version of the quarterly journal Population Trends published by the Office for National Statistics was published in September. This very special issue was the last ever of the journal with future material from the Office for National Statistics to be published on the new website www.ons.gov.uk.

    The last journal in the series was produced in association with the ESRC Centre for Population Change and contained 8 articles authored by researchers in CPC;

    The Changing Demography of mid-life, from the 1980s to the 2000's.
    Read the full Population Trends article here
    View the CPC Briefing Paper based on this article here

    Measuring unmet need for social care amongst older people.
    Read the full Population Trends article here.
    View the CPC Briefing Paper based on this article here

    Trends in A8 migration to the UK during the recession.
    Read the full Population Trends article here
    View the CPC Briefing Paper based on this article here

    Intergenerational replacement and migration in the countries and regions of the United Kingdom, 1971-2009.
    View the full Population Trends article here
    View the CPC Briefing Paper based on this article here

    Trends in cohabitation and marriage in Britain since the 1970s.
    Read the full Population Trends article here

    How serious is the Modifiable Areal Unit Problem for analysis of English census data?
    Read the full Population Trends article here

    Reweighting the General Household Survey 1979-2007.
    Read the full population Trends article here

    Civil partnerships five years on.
    Read the full Population Trends article here
    View ONS podcast on this article here

    Other articles also featured in this issue:
    A new area classification for understanding internal migration in Britain.

    Mortality of the 'Golden Generation': what can the ONS Longitudinal Study tell us?

    How have administrative sources been used to adjust population estimates and set plausibility ranges?

    The full Population Trends Issue 145 can be found here.


    Posted 07/12/2011 16:25

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