U.S. Department of Commerce

Research Reports

You are here: Census.govSubjects A to ZResearch Reports Sorted by Year › Abstract of EX2007/02
Skip top of page navigation

Toward the Social Meaning of the Census to the Inner City Poor: Considerations for the Census Undercount

Elijah Anderson

KEY WORDS: ethnographic interviews, census undercount, privacy, inner city residents, alienation, powerlessness

ABSTRACT

This essay by a noted sociologist examines the social meaning of the census for Black underclass residents of Philadelphia. Based upon ethnographic interviews with poor Blacks, the author assesses motivations and beliefs that give rise to resistance to and fears about being enumerated in the census, including alienation from the larger society, concerns about privacy and control of personal information, ignorance or distrust of the goals of the census, participation in the underground economy, and so on.

CITATION: Elijah Anderson. (1989) Toward the Social Meaning of the Census to the Inner City Poor: Considerations for the Census Undercount. Paper prepared for the U.S. Census Bureau. May 14 1989.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Statistical Research Division

Created: October 23, 2007
Last revised: October 23, 2007


[PDF] or PDF denotes a file in Adobe’s Portable Document Format. To view the file, you will need the Adobe® Reader® Off Site available free from Adobe.

This symbol Off Site indicates a link to a non-government web site. Our linking to these sites does not constitute an endorsement of any products, services or the information found on them. Once you link to another site you are subject to the policies of the new site.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau | Statistical Research Division | (301) 763-3215 (or chad.eric.russell@census.gov) |   Last Revised: October 08, 2010