1 / 33

TYPES AND SOURCES OF POPULATION DATA

TYPES AND SOURCES OF POPULATION DATA. BY Dr. J. Kivelia Department of Geography UNIVERSITY OF DAR ES SALAAM. Outline. Introduction – The need for population data Nature/Types of population data Sources of Population data Censuses Surveys Vital registers. Introduction.

Download Presentation

TYPES AND SOURCES OF POPULATION DATA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. TYPES AND SOURCES OF POPULATION DATA BY Dr. J. Kivelia Department of Geography UNIVERSITY OF DAR ES SALAAM

  2. Outline • Introduction – The need for population data • Nature/Types of population data • Sources of Population data • Censuses • Surveys • Vital registers

  3. Introduction • Demographic data are used to analyse population dynamics • Population data form an important foundation of the planning process in many countries. • Therefore it is important to know the various types and sources of demographic data. • Equally important to detect the main errors and biases contained in the in the data.

  4. Contd. • The Government and other institutions generate demographic data. • Demographic data must be of good quality • The uantity of data generated depends on: • the main objective of collecting this data, • the sources, • the overall attitudes of the population in providing this data, • the accuracy of recording and processing.

  5. The need for demographic data • Demographic data is essential for planning purposes like: • to plan for socio-economic needs • power, water, transport, health, education and shelter. Productiopn of material goods, etc. • to determine the level of electoral representation.

  6. Types of demographic/Population data • Demographic data – size (number), age, sex • Vital events – births, deaths & migrations • Socio-cultural data – marital status, education, occupation/employment, disability, etc.

  7. Sources of Demographic Data • There are three main sources of demographic data which are: • Censuses, • Sample surveys, and, • Vital registrations.

  8. Censuses • A census is defined as the total process of collecting, compiling and publishing demographic, economic and social data pertaining at a specified time to all people in a country or specified territory. • It involves a series of activities spanning over a long time; on most occasions up to five years. • It requires much resources and personnel.

  9. Contd. • After collecting the data the tabulation and publications also requires much money. • The census remains to be the main source demographic data in most developing countries.

  10. Characteristics of a census • A census must fulfill the following characteristic conditions: • Sponsorship • Universality • Simultaneity • Individuality • Periodicity

  11. Characteristics of a Census • 1. Sponsorship: A census is usually sponsored by the national government. • The government provides and mobilizes the resources from various sources especially partners in development like UNFPA. • It requires adequate legislation support or legal authority

  12. Contd. • 2. Universality within a defined territory: Enumeration must cover every person within a defined territory or geographic unit eg. A state, country, region. • 3. Simultaneity: For census data to have any comparative logic a census should be taken simultaneously in the whole country. Best practice is on one defined night.

  13. Contd. • 4. Individuality: refers to individual enumeration where every individual must be enumerated separately. It is only on rare occasions when group enumeration is used e.g. prisons and other armies. • 5. Periodicity: A census should be in a defined period of time at constant intervals say 5 or 10 years so that the information becomes comparable between periods and between populations. E.g. Censuses in Tanzania: 1948, 1957/1958, 1967, 1978, 1988, 2002 and 2012.

  14. Enumeration approaches • Enumeration refers to counting the people within recognized geographical boundaries. • There are two types of enumerations: • De facto • De jure

  15. Contd. • 1. De facto: seeks to obtain information of all persons according to where they were found during the census day or census night. • 2. De jure: enumerates individuals’ data according to the place of usual residence.

  16. Census Errors • Although many censuses have been taken there are several errors especially in developing countries. These are: • Content errors • Coverage errors • Content errors are errors which occur during any stage of collecting data e.g. Response errors, recording errors, editing of questionnaires, coding errors and data compiling processes.

  17. Contd. • Coverage errors are errors occurring because of incomplete coverage of the enumeratin process. This can occur because: • an area within the enumeration region is missed • some groups like the homeless • Some households are missed out within an enumeration area • Some individuals are missed out in the enumerated households

  18. Data Processing and Tabulation • Data processing is needed for economic and social planning • The data must be prepared in well understood tables or friendly usable.

  19. Publications and Dissemination Plans • Census publications should fulfill the needs of the expected users and at the same should be economical, timely and of good quality.

  20. Merits of Censuses • It does not suffer from sampling errors because it covers the whole country or region. • The results can be easily compared with the results of other censuses in other countries because of its universality. • Since it is taken at regular intervals it is the most popular source of demographic data.

  21. Demerits • It is an expensive exercises which necessitates some developing countries not carry it out. • May be postponed due to lack of money e.g. Tanzania 1978 and 1998. • It is difficult to collect detailed information because it covers the whole country.

  22. Sample Surveys • It is the information which is collected from a sample of the population. • The sample is obtained by through various probability sampling techniques such as: • simple random sampling, • stratified sampling, • cluster sampling, • systematic sampling, and, • multistage sampling.

  23. Contd. • The objectives of taking a sample are diversified but most of them intend to take a sample of a population so that it represents accurately the whole population. • It must represent the true characteristics of the population. • Before any sampling is done it is important to draw a sampling frame which can be divided into strata or specified groups according to the needs of the survey.

  24. Contd. • Stratification allows for the sampling of small but significant sub-populations. • Types of sample surveys include: • (a) The single-round survey- involves only one interview with the respondents e.g. World Fertility Surveys in the 1970s and 1980s and Demographic and Health Surveys in the 1990s to the present.

  25. Contd. • 2. The Multi-round Survey: the survey design allows for the possibility of re-interviewing the same respondent several times e.g. Household Surveys and Labour Force Surveys in Tanzania

  26. Merits of Sample Surveys • 1. Sample surveys are simple to carry out and administer. • More flexible than censuses. • It has relatively low cost • More detailed information is collected

  27. Demerits of Sample Surveys • 1. They are not free from sample errors. • 2. Not easy to compare from one country to another.

  28. VITAL REGISTRATIONS • The tradition began several centuries ago in China. • Earliest registration data was obtained from Parish Registers of pre-industrial Europe. • As early 1935 every priest in England was required to make weekly registration of baptism, marriage and death (burials).

  29. Contd. • This occurred decades before the registration system was established throughout the country. • The first compulsory civil registration system started in I Scandinavia in the 17th century. • Later spread to Europe and North America in the 19th century.

  30. Contd. • Nowadays the registration is more established in developed countries where it has assumed legal dimensions and gives specialized data in many social aspects. • Formally it covered births and deaths but nowadays embraces events such as marriage, adoption, annulments, legitimizations, separation, divorce and migration.

  31. Contd. • The system requires a well established system of collecting data on some or all these events. • Hence it is limited in developing countries like Tanzania where it is a rudimentary stages in rural areas. • Village registers is an attempt to develop the registration system.

  32. Merits and Demerits • A better substitute of a census if it is not marred by political ambitions. • Demerit- expensive as a system because it has to cover the country to village level.

  33. Food for thought • Outline the main strengths and weaknesses of: • Censuses • Sample surveys • Vital Registration Systems • Differentiate between de facto and de jure approaches of censuses • Comment on the applicability of Vital Regisstration Systems in developing and developed countries

More Related