Podcast
Questions and Answers
What is demography?
What is demography?
What is a population in the context of demography?
What is a population in the context of demography?
What is a sample in the context of demography?
What is a sample in the context of demography?
What are the observable phenomena studied in demography?
What are the observable phenomena studied in demography?
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What does the term 'individual' refer to in demography?
What does the term 'individual' refer to in demography?
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What does the term 'dynamic demography' encompass?
What does the term 'dynamic demography' encompass?
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What are the sources of information used in demography?
What are the sources of information used in demography?
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What is the demographic transition?
What is the demographic transition?
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What does 'proportion' refer to in static demography?
What does 'proportion' refer to in static demography?
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What does 'migration' encompass in dynamic demography?
What does 'migration' encompass in dynamic demography?
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What is the primary focus of epidemiology?
What is the primary focus of epidemiology?
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What is the focus of dynamic demography?
What is the focus of dynamic demography?
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What sources of information are used in static demography censuses?
What sources of information are used in static demography censuses?
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What is the purpose of static demography surveys?
What is the purpose of static demography surveys?
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What does a static demography population pyramid display?
What does a static demography population pyramid display?
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What is static demography fertility primarily concerned with?
What is static demography fertility primarily concerned with?
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What is the result of demographic transition?
What is the result of demographic transition?
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What does dynamic demography study?
What does dynamic demography study?
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What are the objectives of static demography censuses?
What are the objectives of static demography censuses?
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What is included in static demography census data?
What is included in static demography census data?
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What is the focus of static demography mortality?
What is the focus of static demography mortality?
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What contributes to static demography population growth?
What contributes to static demography population growth?
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What is the focus of static demography surveys?
What is the focus of static demography surveys?
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What does dynamic demography study?
What does dynamic demography study?
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What does static demography fertility primarily concern?
What does static demography fertility primarily concern?
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What is included in static demography census data?
What is included in static demography census data?
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What does static demography mortality focus on?
What does static demography mortality focus on?
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'Migration' encompasses what in dynamic demography?
'Migration' encompasses what in dynamic demography?
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What is the primary focus of epidemiology?
What is the primary focus of epidemiology?
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What are the objectives of static demography censuses?
What are the objectives of static demography censuses?
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What does 'proportion' refer to in static demography?
What does 'proportion' refer to in static demography?
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What contributes to static demography population growth?
What contributes to static demography population growth?
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'Individual' refers to what in demography?
'Individual' refers to what in demography?
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What contributes to demographic transition?
What contributes to demographic transition?
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Study Notes
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Static demography: the study of population structure at a given time, using descriptive statistics like size, structure, and variables such as sex, age, scholarship, and work.
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Dynamic demography: the study of population trends, the evolution mechanism, and prediction of population changes, focusing on natural (fertility, mortality, and migration) and migratory population movements.
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Static demography sources of information: numerical and categorical data, including administrative records, sanitary records, and census data from homes and inhabitants.
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Static demography census: a legal process aimed at gathering, summarizing, analyzing, and publishing demographic, economic, and social data for a country or territory, including individual, universal, simultaneous, periodic, mandatory, confidential data, and ID and personal information.
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Objectives of Static demography censuses: population counting, structure and evolution knowledge, demographic analysis enablement, and planning and evaluating policy results.
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Static demography surveys: obtaining information from a sample of the population and inferring the results for the entire population, with periodicity, ad hoc design, flexibility, and state or private sponsorship.
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Static demography population pyramid: a double histogram displaying the age and gender distribution of a population, with intervals of 5 years, males on the left, females on the right, bottom-up order, and an open last interval.
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Dynamic demography population movements: natural, including fertility, mortality, and migration, and migratory population movements, including migrations.
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Static demography fertility: a key component of dynamic demography, with definitions, data sources, and indexes, including crude indicators of fertility and age-adjusted indicators of fertility, indicators of reproduction, and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development's Fertility Rates page.
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Static demography mortality: another component of dynamic demography, with data sources and references for further study.
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Static demography migration: the third component of dynamic demography, with data sources and references for further study.
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Static demography population growth: the result of adding births, immigrants, and subtracting deaths and emigrants, with data sources for further study.
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Demographic transition: a historical process of change in fertility and mortality rate levels, closely related to improvements in various aspects of society, including urban planning, productive systems, labor conditions, infrastructure and basic supplies, nutrition, environment, education, gender relations, and health care systems.
-
Static demography: the study of population structure at a given time, using descriptive statistics like size, structure, and variables such as sex, age, scholarship, and work.
-
Dynamic demography: the study of population trends, the evolution mechanism, and prediction of population changes, focusing on natural (fertility, mortality, and migration) and migratory population movements.
-
Static demography sources of information: numerical and categorical data, including administrative records, sanitary records, and census data from homes and inhabitants.
-
Static demography census: a legal process aimed at gathering, summarizing, analyzing, and publishing demographic, economic, and social data for a country or territory, including individual, universal, simultaneous, periodic, mandatory, confidential data, and ID and personal information.
-
Objectives of Static demography censuses: population counting, structure and evolution knowledge, demographic analysis enablement, and planning and evaluating policy results.
-
Static demography surveys: obtaining information from a sample of the population and inferring the results for the entire population, with periodicity, ad hoc design, flexibility, and state or private sponsorship.
-
Static demography population pyramid: a double histogram displaying the age and gender distribution of a population, with intervals of 5 years, males on the left, females on the right, bottom-up order, and an open last interval.
-
Dynamic demography population movements: natural, including fertility, mortality, and migration, and migratory population movements, including migrations.
-
Static demography fertility: a key component of dynamic demography, with definitions, data sources, and indexes, including crude indicators of fertility and age-adjusted indicators of fertility, indicators of reproduction, and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development's Fertility Rates page.
-
Static demography mortality: another component of dynamic demography, with data sources and references for further study.
-
Static demography migration: the third component of dynamic demography, with data sources and references for further study.
-
Static demography population growth: the result of adding births, immigrants, and subtracting deaths and emigrants, with data sources for further study.
-
Demographic transition: a historical process of change in fertility and mortality rate levels, closely related to improvements in various aspects of society, including urban planning, productive systems, labor conditions, infrastructure and basic supplies, nutrition, environment, education, gender relations, and health care systems.
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Description
Test your knowledge of terminology in demography, biostatistics, epidemiology, and public health with this quiz. Topics include static and dynamic demography, population growth, sources of information, and demographic transition.