- Occupations
The number of employees of East North Central Division was 431,370 for engineering in 2010. The number of employees of Pacific Division was 512,670 for engineering in 2010.
Occupations
Above charts are based on data from the U.S. Census American Community Survey | ODN Dataset | API -
Jobs and Occupations Datasets Involving East North Central Division or Pacific Division
- API
Current Employment Statistics: Beginning 1990
data.ny.gov | Last Updated 2024-09-20T16:20:17.000ZCurrent Employment by Industry (CES) data reflect jobs by "place of work." It does not include the self-employed, unpaid family workers, and private household employees. Jobs located in the county or the metropolitan area that pay wages and salaries are counted although workers may live outside the area. Jobs are counted regardless of the number of hours worked. Individuals who hold more than one job (i.e. multiple job holders) may be counted more than once. The employment figure is an estimate of the number of jobs in the area (regardless of the place of residence of the workers) rather than a count of jobs held by the residents of the area.
- API
1980 Census Detailed Census Tract Data
data.kcmo.org | Last Updated 2021-11-12T15:18:16.000Zdetailed 1980 characteristics of people and housing for individual 2010 census tract portions inside or outside KCMO
- API
Baseline Survey for an Impact Evaluation of the Greenbelt Transformation Initiative in South Sudan-Data: Section 1
datahub.usaid.gov | Last Updated 2024-07-12T09:42:02.000ZThis dataset is derived from a 2013 household baseline survey in the country's Greenbelt region as part of an impact evaluation of the Food, Agribusiness, and Rural Markets (FARM) Project, which is intended to improve agricultural sector productivity and marketing in the Greenbelt and to support increasing South Sudan's food supply to reach food self-sufficiency. In the process of migrating data to the current DDL platform, datasets with a large number of variables required splitting into multiple spreadsheets. They should be reassembled by the user to understand the data fully.