Children with all available parents in the labor force by children in immigrant families in North Carolina
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Definitions:
The share of children under age 18 whose resident parents are in the civilian labor force by children in foreign-born or US-born families.
For children living in a married-couple family or subfamily, this means
that both parents are in the labor force. For children living in a
single-parent family or subfamily, this means the resident parent is in
the labor force. The civilian labor force includes persons who are
employed and those who are unemployed but looking for work.
Foreign-born is defined as either a U.S. citizen by naturalization or
not a citizen of the U.S. Native-born is defined as born in the U.S.,
Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, or the Northern Marianas or
born abroad of American parents. Children living in subfamilies are
linked to their parent(s) and not the householder. Children in immigrant
families is defined as children who are themselves foreign-born or
reside with at least one foreign-born parent.
Data Source:
Population Reference Bureau, analysis of data from the U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000 Supplementary Survey, 2001 Supplementary Survey, 2002 through 2007 American Community Survey.
The data for this measure come from the 2000 and 2001 Supplementary
Survey and the 2002 through 2007 American Community Survey (ACS). The
2000 through 2004 ACS surveyed approximately 700,000 households monthly
during each calendar year. In general but particularly for these years,
use caution when interpreting estimates for less populous states or
indicators representing small sub-populations, where the sample size is
relatively small. Beginning in January 2005, the U.S. Census Bureau
expanded the ACS sample to 3 million households (full implementation),
and in January 2006 the ACS included group quarters. The ACS, fully
implemented, is designed to provide annually updated social, economic,
and housing data for states and communities. (Such local-area data have
traditionally been collected once every ten years in the long form of
the decennial census.)
Estimates for years 2000 though 2004 are presented by a series of 3-year
averages computed by PRB--the first year 2000 to 2002, the second year
2001 to 2003 and the third year 2002 to 2004. The 2005 ACS, is the first
year with an expanded sample and is presented by estimates with a
single year of data.
Only children living with at least one parent are included in this analysis.
Footnotes:
Updated January 2009.
S - Estimates suppressed when the confidence interval around the
percentage is greater than or equal to 10 percentage points. N.A. – Data
not available.
Data are provided for the 50 most populous cities according to the most
recent Census counts. Cities for which data is collected may change
over time.
A 90 percent confidence interval for each estimate can be found at