600 Search Results Found For : "������������������������KaKaoTalk:za33������������������:www.za32.net"



U.S. Science and Engineering Labor Force Stalls, but Trends Vary Across States

(2012) Scientists and engineers make up only about 5 percent of the U.S. labor force, but are viewed as an important engine for higher earnings, innovation, and economic growth.

View Details

Get to Know PRB CEO Jennifer D. Sciubba

An internationally recognized expert in political demography, Jennifer has worked throughout her career to educate the broader public about the importance of population trends.

View Details

PRB Discuss Online: Americans at Work, What Lies Ahead?

(2008) The aging of baby boomers and the fact that women's labor force participation has already peaked are expected to slow U.S. labor force growth in the near future.

View Details

Without My Consent — Women and HIV-Related Stigma in India

(2003) Both are voices of women in Delhi, but they could be from anywhere in this country of 1 billion people.

View Details

Population Bulletin, vol. 63, no. 1: Managing Migration–The Global Challenge

(March 2008) The number of international migrants is at an all-time high. There were 191 million migrants in 2005, which means that 3 percent of the world's people left their country of birth or citizenship for a year or more.

View Details Array ( [ID] => 14921 [id] => 14921 [title] => Population-Bulletin-2008-63.1migration [filename] => Population-Bulletin-2008-63.1migration.pdf [filesize] => 895837 [url] => https://www.prb.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/Population-Bulletin-2008-63.1migration.pdf [link] => https://www.prb.org/resources/managing-migration-the-global-challenge/population-bulletin-2008-63-1migration-2/ [alt] => [author] => 15 [description] => [caption] => [name] => population-bulletin-2008-63-1migration-2 [status] => inherit [uploaded_to] => 5588 [date] => 2021-01-30 19:40:02 [modified] => 2021-01-30 19:40:02 [menu_order] => 0 [mime_type] => application/pdf [type] => application [subtype] => pdf [icon] => https://www.prb.org/wp-includes/images/media/document.png ) Download (0.9 MB)

The United States at 300 Million

HOW WE HAVE CHANGED SINCE THE UNITED STATES WAS A NATION OF 200 MILLION (September 2006) The United States is set to reach a milestone in October. It will become the third country—after China and India—to be home to at least 300 million people.

View Details

Continuity and Change in the U.S. Decennial Census

The first nation in the world to take a regular population census, the United States has been counting its population every 10 years since 1790—as required by the U.S. Constitution (Article I, Section 2).

View Details