The Census is a once a decade process by the government that attempts to catalog the United States’ population and some basic information about everyone collectively. Among the information that the government currently collects is the marital history of the population e.g. whether a person recently married or divorced. Now the Census Bureau has released a statement asking for public comment on the idea of removing the marital history question from the Census. Though this may seem like a fairly insignificant issue, it actually may have far reaching effects on government policy, as well as on the way social scientists have to study marriage and divorce.
The American Community Survey
As it stands, the Census itself already does not actually ask about marital history because of a recent change in the Census format. In the past, the government sent out two forms of the Census, the short form and the long form. Every citizen received the short form, which asked only basic questions, and one out of six households had to answer the long form, a more in-depth questionnaire. This changed for the most recent Census. Now, everyone only receives the short form Census, and some households are also sent the American Community Survey.
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