Data Dictionary: ACS 2022 (1-Year Estimates)
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Data Source:Social Explorer; U.S. Census Bureau
Table: A05002. People Reporting Ancestry [109]
Universe: Total Population
Table Details
A05002. People Reporting Ancestry
Universe: Total Population
VariableLabel
A05002_001
A05002_002
A05002_003
A05002_004
A05002_005
A05002_006
A05002_007
A05002_008
A05002_009
A05002_010
A05002_011
A05002_012
A05002_013
A05002_014
A05002_015
A05002_016
A05002_017
A05002_018
A05002_019
A05002_020
A05002_021
A05002_022
A05002_023
A05002_024
A05002_025
A05002_026
A05002_027
A05002_028
A05002_029
A05002_030
A05002_031
A05002_032
A05002_033
A05002_034
A05002_035
A05002_036
A05002_037
A05002_038
A05002_039
A05002_040
A05002_041
A05002_042
A05002_043
A05002_044
A05002_045
A05002_046
A05002_047
A05002_048
A05002_049
A05002_050
A05002_051
A05002_052
A05002_053
A05002_054
A05002_055
A05002_056
A05002_057
A05002_058
A05002_059
A05002_060
A05002_061
A05002_062
A05002_063
A05002_064
A05002_065
A05002_066
A05002_067
A05002_068
A05002_069
A05002_070
A05002_071
A05002_072
A05002_073
A05002_074
A05002_075
A05002_076
A05002_077
A05002_078
A05002_079
A05002_080
A05002_081
A05002_082
A05002_083
A05002_084
A05002_085
A05002_086
A05002_087
A05002_088
A05002_089
A05002_090
A05002_091
A05002_092
A05002_093
A05002_094
A05002_095
A05002_096
A05002_097
A05002_098
A05002_099
A05002_100
A05002_101
A05002_102
A05002_103
A05002_104
A05002_105
A05002_106
A05002_107
A05002_108
A05002_109
Relevant Documentation:
Excerpt from: Social Explorer; U.S. Census Bureau; 2022 ACS 1-year and 2018-2022 ACS 5-year Data Releases : Technical Documentation.
 
Year of Entry
The data on year of entry were derived from answers to Question 9 in the 2022 American Community Survey. This question was asked about Persons 1 through 5 in the ACS, and was restricted to those persons who on Question 8 answered that they were in citizenship categories (2) born in Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, or Northern Marianas, (3) born abroad of U.S. citizen parent or parents, (4) U.S. citizen by naturalization, or (5) not a U.S citizen.

All respondents born outside the United States were asked for the year in which they came to live in the United States. This includes people born in Puerto Rico and U.S. Island Areas; people born abroad of an U.S. citizen parent or parents; and the foreign born. (See "Citizenship Status.") For the Puerto Rico Community Survey, respondents were asked for the year in which they came to live in Puerto Rico.

The responses to this question indicate when persons born outside of the U.S. came to live in the United States.

Question/Concept History

Since 1996, the year of entry questions for the American Community Survey and for the Puerto Rico Survey were identical. An instruction was added beginning in 1999 to "Print numbers in boxes."

Limitation of the Data

Respondents were directed to indicate the year they entered the U.S. "to live" (or "to live" in Puerto Rico, for the Puerto Community Survey). For respondents who entered the U.S. (or entered Puerto Rico for the Puerto Rico Community Survey) multiple times, the interviewers were instructed to request the most recent year of entry. For respondents who entered multiple times and did not ask the interviewer for clarification or who mailed back the questionnaire without being interviewed in person, it is unclear which year of entry was provided (i.e. first or most recent).

Beginning in 2006, the population in group quarters (GQ) is included in the ACS. Some types of GQ populations may have year of entry distributions that are different from the household population. The inclusion of the GQ population could therefore have a noticeable impact on the year of entry distribution. This is particularly true for areas with substantial GQ populations.

Comparability

Year of entry was comparable across ACS years. A note of caution when comparing ACS and Census 2000 year of entry data: Census 2000 represents data collected as of April 1, 2000 and thus the "2000" year of entry category accounts only for the first quarter (Jan-Mar) in 2000. In comparison, the ACS represents data collected throughout the entire year and thus the "2000" year of entry category accounts for the entire year of 2000. For more information, go to https://data.census.gov and enter "Comparing ACS Data" in the search box.

Excerpt from: Social Explorer; U.S. Census Bureau; 2022 ACS 1-year and 2018-2022 ACS 5-year Data Releases : Technical Documentation.
 
Foreign born
The foreign-born population includes anyone who was not a U.S. citizen or a U.S. national at birth. This includes respondents who indicated they were a U.S. citizen by naturalization or not a U.S. citizen.

The American Community Survey questionnaires do not ask about immigration status. The population surveyed includes all people who indicated that the United States was their usual place of residence on the survey date. The foreign-born population includes naturalized U.S. citizens, lawful permanent residents (i.e. immigrants), temporary migrants (e.g., foreign students), humanitarian migrants (e.g., refugees), and unauthorized migrants (i.e. people illegally present in the United States).

The responses to this question are used to determine the U.S. citizen and non-U.S. citizen populations as well as to determine the native and foreign-born populations.

Question/Concept History

In the 1996-1998 American Community Survey, the third response category was "Yes, born abroad of American parent(s)." However, since 1999 in
the American Community Survey and since the 2005 Puerto Rico Community Survey, the response category was "Yes, born abroad of American parent or parents." In 2008, respondents who indicated that they were a U.S. citizen by naturalization were also asked to print their year of naturalization. Also in 2008, modifications in wording were made to both the third response category (changed from "Yes, born abroad of American parent or parents" to "Yes, born abroad of U.S. citizen parent or parents") and the fifth response category (changed from "No, not a citizen of the United States" to "No, not a U.S. citizen").

Limitation of the Data

Beginning in 2006, the population in group quarters (GQ) is included in the ACS. Some types of GQ populations may have citizenship status distributions that are different from the household population. The inclusion of the GQ population could therefore have a noticeable impact on the citizenship status distribution. This is particularly true for areas with substantial GQ populations.

Comparability

Citizenship can be compared both across ACS years and to Census 2000 data. For more information, go to http://www.census.gov and enter "Comparing ACS Data" in the search box.

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