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#postponement of census 2023
naijtimes · 1 year
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President Buhari has authorized the delay of the 2023 census.
President Muhammadu Buhari has approved the postponement of the 2023 Population and Housing Census, earlier scheduled for 3-7 May 2023, to a date to be determined by the incoming Administration. The President gave the approval after meeting with some members of the Federal Executive Council and the Chairman of the National Population Commission and his team at the Presidential Villa in Abuja on…
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President Buhari has authorized the delay of the 2023 census.
President Muhammadu Buhari has approved the postponement of the 2023 Population and Housing Census, earlier scheduled for 3-7 May 2023, to a date to be determined by the incoming Administration. The President gave the approval after meeting with some members of the Federal Executive Council and the Chairman of the National Population Commission and his team at the Presidential Villa in Abuja on…
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morenewsng · 1 year
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FG postpones 2023 Census
FG postpones 2023 Census   President Muhammadu Buhari has approved the postponement of the 2023 Population and Housing Census, earlier scheduled for 3-7 May 2023, to a date to be determined by the incoming Administration. The President gave the approval after meeting with some members of the Federal Executive Council and the Chairman of natpopcom and his team at the Presidential Villa in Abuja on…
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newsbreak365 · 1 year
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census2023 · 1 year
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Punjab Population 2023 | Sex Ratio & Literacy rate 2023 - Census 2023
As per details from the 2011 Census, Punjab has a population of 2.77 Crores, an increase from the figure of 2.44 Crores in the 2001 census. The total population of Punjab as per the latest census data is 27,743,338 of which males and females are 14,639,465 and 13,103,873 respectively. In 2001, the total population was 24,358,999 with which males were 12,985,045 while females 11,373,954. The real population growth in this decade was 13.89 percent while in the previous decade, it was 19.76 percent. The population of Punjab forms 2.29 percent of India in 2011. In 2001, the figure was 2.37 percent.
Punjab Literacy Rate 2023 The literacy rate in Punjab has seen an upward trend and is 75.84 percent as per the latest population census. Male literacy stands at 80.44 percent while female literacy is at 70.73 percent.
Punjab 2022 - 2023 Population What is the population of Punjab in 2023? The last census of Punjab was done in 2011 and the next census of 2021 has been postponed or canceled. But we do have a projection of Punjab's 2023 Population on the basis likely Population Growth Rate.
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mmulnivasi · 1 year
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#WamanMeshram Postponing the Jail Bharo Movement of 6 November National Convention of BAMCEF is being held from 24. Therefore, if we organize all the programmes of November and December, we cannot deny the possibility of having negative effect on the preparations of National Convention. Therefore, keeping this in mind, as we have announced Bharat Bandh for the OBCs on 28 November will be organized as per schedule, and its preparation will be started on 15 November. Before, 15 November preparations for National Convention should be made continually, and after 15 November preparations for Bharat Bandh should be made. Our programme on the caste based census of OBC and all the other issues of OBC will be continued. And along with that the Jail Bharo movement that we have announced on 6 November on the issue of OBC and will be postponed to 31 January 2023. We will organize Jail Bharo movement on all the issues of OBC, and on the issues for which Jail Bharo movement of 6 November was planned. Keeping these two issues in mind, in coming days we will declare the strategy of the movement. Keeping this in mind all the people of BAMCEF, Bharat MuktiMorcha, Bahujan Kranti Morcha and about 90 offshoot organizations throughout the country have to make preparations,and not pay attention to any other things, and carry out the work. -Hon. WamanMeshram, National President, BAMCEF/Bharat Mukti Morcha. https://www.instagram.com/p/Ckk6z5vsG3m/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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alabingo · 2 years
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Why the 2023 population census must be postponed
Why the 2023 population census must be postponed
By Michael Owhoko| Without prejudice to extent of preparations, has government genuinely evaluated reasons for dispute and rejection of previous census results in Nigeria before proceeding to organize another headcount?  Results of census conducted in 1962, 1963, 1973, 1991, and 2006 were all marred by anomalies and controversies allegedly engendered by manipulation and falsification of…
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bountyofbeads · 5 years
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Government Shutdown May Turn a Day in Court Into a Four-Year Wait https://nyti.ms/2Rztass
Government shutdowns are STUPID, EXPENSIVE and make government LESS EFFICIENT. Trump filed for bankruptcy 6 or more times and now you know why. #MAGA voters you were warned but didn't listen, so when your benefits and tax refunds are delayed don't blame the #Democrats. All this for your #fuckingwall. #ImpeachTrump #ImpeachTrumpNow #ImpeachTheMF #Cult45 #trumpshutdown #TrumpShitShow #25thAmendmentNow
Government Shutdown May Turn a Day in Court Into a Four-Year Wait
By Richard A. Oppel Jr. and Christina Goldbaum | Jan. 4, 2019 | New York Times | Posted January 4, 2019 |
A 61-year-old man from the Dominican Republic has been waiting for his day in federal immigration court since the 1980s, unable to visit his dying mother back home or, in recent years, legally hold a job. His trial was finally to come next week. But because of the federal government shutdown, he stands to lose his precious court date.
In the backlogged immigration courts, that is likely to mean not just a few more weeks of waiting, but a few more years. Migrants like this man — who asked to be identified only by his first name, Jose, for fear of repercussions in court — are being sent to the back of the line, with their new court dates coming as late as 2022.
From furloughs at the Justice Department to confusion in the courts, to prison officers working without a paycheck, the shutdown has challenged the nation’s courts and criminal justice system and those whose livelihoods depend on them, slowing some cases while throwing others into disarray.
Elsewhere, Justice Department lawyers have begged to delay civil cases in which the government — or even President Trump — is being sued, saying they are now prohibited from working on these cases except in emergencies and other very limited circumstances. They have met with mixed success. In a lawsuit alleging that Mr. Trump used his Washington hotel to illegally profit from business with foreign countries, a delay has been granted.
But in a case that seeks to block the Trump administration from questioning people about their citizenship in the 2020 census — a measure that critics say is devised to suppress responses from migrants — the judge, Richard Seeborg of Federal District Court in San Francisco, denied a request to delay and ordered the trial to begin Monday. The Justice Department says it will comply. Judges will have significant latitude to determine which cases go forward and which are delayed, once the court fees and other revenue are depleted.
“Judges are in the best position to determine what cases have an urgency,” said David Sellers, the spokesman for the Administrative Office of the United States Courts.
Mr. Sellers said judges will continue to appoint defense lawyers to represent criminal defendants too poor to pay for one, and jurors will continue to be empaneled. They will get paid, he said, once money is appropriated.
Advocates for prisoners and their families fear that the shutdown could delay the implementation of a new criminal justice bill that promised to shorten sentences for some federal inmates by recalculating the amount of good time credit they have earned, because the Justice Department must create new tools and protocols first.
The deadlines for those “were already pretty ambitious, even when the department was fully staffed and appropriated,” said Kevin Ring, president of FAMM, a nonprofit group that was founded to oppose mandatory minimum sentences. “We’re watching that closely.”
But probably no system is feeling the shutdown as much as the already overburdened immigration courts, where there are more than 800,000 cases pending. Most of these courts, except those that hear the cases of those currently in detention, are now closed because of the shutdown.
As a result, the impasse over the Trump administration’s demand for a border wall to halt illegal immigration will result in long delays in deportations for those who are already here but ultimately lose their cases.
“That is the irony of this shutdown,” said Judge Amiena Khan, the executive vice president of the National Association of Immigration Judges, the judges’ union. “The impact is most acutely felt in immigration courts and proceedings where cases will not be going forward.”
Because of the volume of trials from the past two weeks that now must be rescheduled, the affected cases are likely to be pushed to the end of the judges’ dockets rather than squeezed into their schedules once the shutdown ends.
In New York, home to one of the busiest immigration courts in the country, those whose trials have been postponed will have to wait until the end of 2022 and 2023 at the earliest before their cases are heard because of the backlog, Judge Khan said.
“I was very nervous because we were so close, and this is just making me even more nervous,” Jose said. “Every day I hope the government reopens.”
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newshubnaija · 2 years
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Southerners Behind Call For Census Postponement – Tanko Yakasai
Southerners Behind Call For Census Postponement – Tanko Yakasai
Elder statesman, Tanko Yakasai has accused Southerners of being behind the call by some Northern leaders for the postponement of the 2022 Population Census. Yakasai claimed that the Southerners have bought some of the northern leaders and are afraid the north will further assert its numerical advantage during the 2023 general elections with the census. He made the allegation on Thursday when a…
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newsweb1 · 2 years
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Northern leaders want census postponed, assent to Electoral Act
Northern leaders want census postponed, assent to Electoral Act
Northern Leaders of Thought (NLT) on Saturday called for postponement of the planned 2022 census due to its proximity to the 2023 general elections, while urging President Muhammadu Buhari to assent to the Electoral Act. Speaking in a communiqué issued after a one-day meeting at Arewa House to coincide with the death anniversary of Northern Premier, Sir Ahmadu Bello, and other Northern leaders,…
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lexzycom1 · 2 years
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Northern leaders want census postponed, assent to Electoral Act
Northern leaders want census postponed, assent to Electoral Act
Northern Leaders of Thought (NLT) on Saturday called for postponement of the planned 2022 census due to its proximity to the 2023 general elections, while urging President Muhammadu Buhari to assent to the Electoral Act. Speaking in a communiqué issued after a one-day meeting at Arewa House to coincide with the death anniversary of Northern Premier, Sir Ahmadu Bello, and other Northern leaders,…
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jiokcareers · 2 years
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NEWS UPDATE: Insecurity: Postpone 2022 national census – Northerners appeal to Buhari
NEWS UPDATE: Insecurity: Postpone 2022 national census – Northerners appeal to Buhari
Critical stakeholders of the north led by the Northern Elders Forum (NEF) that met under “Northern Leaders of Thought” in Kaduna have strongly advised the President Muhammadu Buhari-led government to postpone the planned 2022 National Census considering a large number of displaced Nigerians and the proximity of the census to the 2023 elections. The meeting urged the national and state assemblies…
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perfectirishgifts · 3 years
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From The Experts: Media And Advertising In 2021
New Post has been published on https://perfectirishgifts.com/from-the-experts-media-and-advertising-in-2021/
From The Experts: Media And Advertising In 2021
The short-lived Quibi was one of the casualties of the pandemic ridden 2020, nonetheless many media … [] experts expects 2021 to be banner year for connected TV devices and streaming video. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg
By all accounts 2020 was a miserable year. A global pandemic led to an economic recession impacting the ad marketplace. Production studios the television and film industry. Stay-at-home orders closed retail stores and movie theaters. Viewers migrated to home entertainment, HBO Max, Peacock and the short lived Quibi were launched. Sporting events were either canceled, suspended or postponed such as the Tokyo Olympics. Meanwhile, there was a contentious election and in January the U.S. will have a new President. What else could happen in 2021? We asked some experts.  
Tim Jones, CEO, Publicis Media Americas
“The old rules no longer apply: Cookies are going away, commerce has exploded and consumer expectations are driving the industry towards new future proofing opportunities and structures. In order for brands to succeed in a platform world, they must be digitally-resilient, have identity systems to provide personalization at scale and have the infrastructure set up to deliver relevant and meaningful experiences. When brands progress in all of these areas, they can create long-term consumer value and maintain a competitive advantage that will last far beyond any crisis lifecycle.”
Rob Davis, President & CMO, Novus Next
“Two growing marketer needs that were accelerated by the pandemic will extend into 2021: flexibility and customization.  Long-term media deals are becoming ever-rarer as advertisers face continued economic and operational uncertainty; they need increasing flexibility to quickly pull back or shut off their advertising.  Similarly, many brands—be they regional or national in distribution— will increasingly be looking to local media to help adapt to the wide array of local COVID regulations, closures and variance in consumer demand.  Geo-targeted media will offer the needed customization. ” 
Esther Maguire SVP of Marketing, VideoAmp
“Connected TV Prevails: It’s important to reach people when they’re most receptive to consuming ads, that’s why Connected TV will remain as a powerful medium for connecting the dots between awareness and attribution in 2021. One-to-one engagement is an advertiser’s dream, but from a privacy perspective, it’s difficult to make those connections. Barriers and regulations like GDPR, new PII classifications and the death of the cookie are only the beginning. People want to make authentic connections with brands, not feel like a target. For an advertiser to find the right moments to connect with consumers, CTV should be in their arsenal.”
Brian Morrison, CEO, Terraboost Media
“The heaviest OOH spenders currently are companies thriving during the COVID era, such as Amazon AMZN and Netflix NFLX . While roadside traffic and commutes are down, consumers still must travel to supermarkets, drugstores, and doctors’ offices. Terraboost Media has built a network 100,000 hand sanitizing billboards located at the entrances and pharmacy wait areas of retailers such as CVS, Rite Aid, and Stop & Shop. CPM are low, frequency high, and OOH affords opportunities to break through the clutter in ways other media cannot replicate. Our hand sanitizing billboards provide advertisers the ability to sponsor health and wellness and keep families safe.” 
Bill Harvey, Executive Chairman, Bill Harvey Consulting
“Optimism will rise as vaccinations reverse the pandemic tide. Because this will happen unevenly by market, brands will increase their use of local media and rediscover its ability to find growth pockets for nationally topped-out brands. First results of trials of the WFA/ANA cross-platform measurement specifications will reveal that panel data cannot be used as a truth source and that combining big and panel data is more complicated but do-able. DCT expansion will result in new ROAS compilations that will benefit all television forms. Addressable TV will become easier to buy and more national network inventory will become addressable.”
Abhay Singhal, co-founder and CEO, InMobi  
“Time spent using mobile apps rose to new heights in 2020, and apps will likely be even more popular in 2021. After all, Americans have been spending more time looking at their mobile device screens than they’ve spent watching TV since 2019, according to eMarketer. For media and entertainment companies (and really all advertisers), it’s critical to reach their target audience where they are: using mobile apps. Savvy marketers will increasingly leverage mobile in-app advertising in the coming months, taking advantage of its viewability, addressability and scale, among other benefits.”
Kym Frank, President, Geopath
“The emergence of outcome-based planning and buying that we saw take root over the past two years will flourish in 2021, especially as more granular data becomes available across all platforms. Consumers who were previously restricting their mobility will emerge from their homes – hungry for experiences and interactions. Marketers will look to leverage this increased out of home activity so that they can make up sales ground lost in 2020. That will mean an emphasis on using dollars efficiently by engaging with consumers where they can best convert them to purchase. It’s a convergence of events that we feel will lead to a solid year for OOH ad growth.”
Naveen Wall, Associate Director of Client Strategy, Movable Ink
“Customer retention will remain critical for streaming services as consumers reduce discretionary spending. As Pay TV households decline, the appetite for subscription stacking will grow (the stacking of several services on top of one another). Competition will heat up with new Subscription Video on Demand entrants, tiered pricing, and free ad-supported video services as consumers supplement their streaming diet with free alternatives. SVOD will continue growing, however, projections forecast a slowdown peaking in 2024 due to an overcrowded market and subscription fatigue. This places increased importance in 2021 on building loyalty and driving adoption with superior content and customer experience.”
Tim Vanderhook, CEO, Viant Technology
 “Connected TV (CTV) is growing in importance which is fueling the shift away from device identification and toward household identification as vital to the new digital ecosystem. As constant market disruption is accelerating consumer consumption changes, industry leaders need to have eyes on every device in the home. Marketers who embrace household measurement will gain a clearer picture of return on ad spend (ROAS) and the true impact of their advertising campaigns.”
Yashina Burns, Director, Data Privacy and Legal Affairs, DeepIntent,
“While CPRA won’t become law until 2023, other states will likely create similar regulations in the interim and further push the ad industry to adopt targeting technologies that are more conscious of consumer privacy. Marketing leaders need to get ready now by focusing on privacy-friendly solutions that limit the use of sensitive personal information. Publishers and platforms that offer compliant data collection across platforms – especially in the healthcare space where privacy is of the utmost importance – will be well-positioned to continue the services they offer to marketers amid the coming regulatory change.”
Michael Schoen, SVP/GM of Marketing Solutions, Neustar
“While entities like Gartner IT  and the U.S. Census Bureau have endorsed differential privacy, it’s not understood or used widely within the marketing ecosystem. In 2021, we’ll start to see a seismic shift in marketers leveraging differential privacy algorithms as a way to provide highly accurate multi-touch attribution without requiring individual-level advertising impression data. Advances in privacy like this are needed because traditional privacy safeguards, like anonymization, have been found to be ineffective. This advanced data science approach ensures brands can measure advertising performance across closed media platforms in a privacy-centric way without relying on third-party cookies and MAIDs.”
Bill Magnuson, co-founder and CEO, Braze 
“In 2021, streaming brands will need to step up their sophisticated retention efforts. Despite the saturation in streaming as new user growth has declined for two consecutive months (September to October saw a 46% decrease in new user acquisition), there’s still new streaming services being rolled out. While new content is slowing down significantly, and as we continue to see a “k-shaped” economic recovery, streaming services will focus on retention activity and getting more out of their existing customers. Industry leaders have already prioritized lifecycle marketing where everything from onboarding to ongoing customer engagement is examined and tested every day.”
Raman Abrol, General Manager and Chief Commercial Officer, Amdocs Media 
“COVID-19 accelerated the debate around theatrical runs, premium VOD and a streaming-centric future. Disney’s Premier Access of Mulan, along with WarnerMedia and AT&T’s T approach with Wonder Woman, are redefining release windows. As consumers remain cautious about returning to theaters, expect several options to be explored in 2021, like condensing traditional release windows, partnerships between theaters and studios to share VOD revenue, and experimentation by theaters in new areas like e-gaming, e-sports, luxury experiences and corporate seminars. We’ll see revised premium recurring bundles that incorporate several of these unique experiences in the home, providing new revenue opportunities for content platforms and service providers.” 
Amanda Shelton, VP, Product, Valassis
“Amid the pandemic with people spending more time at home, connected TV grew exponentially in 2020. There are certain consumers that simply cannot be reached on traditional TV anymore – only streaming or CTV platforms. Going into 2021, this momentum will lead to continued rapid growth in this channel. That said, we’ll see several changes in the advertising marketplace. For starters, advertisers will demand increased transparency around reporting, in terms of what content consumers are viewing, which publishers the ads are running on and their return on advertising spend.”
Mahesh Narayanan, President of Affinity Answers  
“In 2021, I won’t be surprised if some media companies enter the TV device market or Internet TV market (via stick, like Roku or Amazon Fire TV Stick), to control the end-user experience. Negotiations like HBO Max on Amazon Fire and Roku, took forever and has definitely impacted subscriber growth. AT&T has WarnerMedia, Comcast CMCSA has NBCU, so a Verizon VZ , ViacomCBS merger won’t be surprising to me. Marketing content on TV devices will become like an SEO exercise. Sponsored search results on TV devices (like Roku, Samsung) may become an increasingly adopted tactic.”
Kristin Dolan, Founder & CEO, 605
“Fragmentation of TV puts premium on data-driven audiences. With the ongoing pandemic, we’ve seen more people spend more time at home – in front of screens, so the attention paid to how people watch television is more relevant than ever. An abundance of programming, on new platforms, designed for niche audiences means an increasingly fragmented TV environment that places a premium on data-driven insights. To succeed, especially when working with constrained budgets, advertisers will need to determine where and when their target audiences are consuming TV content to uncover and most effectively reach these new audience segments.” 
Daniel Elad, Chief Strategy Officer at TheViewPoint
“The pandemic has seriously impacted businesses across the globe. Hence, many have abandoned particular ad channels, but not CTV. Since March 2020, the ad dollars poured into CTV have reached a total of $8.11B, and this figure will account for $11.36B next year. Since we’re entering another pandemic year, I believe TV upfront deals will remain on pause. Meanwhile, more dollars will be shifting via programmatic pipes, and the pandemic will expedite this process. Unlike TV upfront, programmatic offers better flexibility for allocating ad spend, providing granular targeting and the opportunity to manage campaigns on-the-fly.”
Buzz Knight, CEO/Founder, Buzz Knight Media
“The balance sheets of broadcast companies will continue trending with lower margins yielding more experimentation to create new revenue streams. Diversity will continue to be an important boardroom topic and there will be small improvements by the audio industry as it relates to content creation and business implementation. Ad attribution methods will continue to evolve, improve and grow via new forms of technology that will help advertisers track campaign performance. New measurement options will emerge allowing broadcasters to add other forms of data to the story they are telling advertisers. Talent will begin to migrate to other distribution platforms as their fear of the future will continue to creep in.”
Matthew O’Connor, CEO, AdQuick
“Out-of-home advertising will rebound at a frenetic pace in 2021, but this comeback won’t happen simultaneously across all regions. What we’ll see is advertisers in a sprint to reclaim out-of-home media in high traffic commuter areas as people come back to work. Airport advertising, transit advertising and large billboards in Los Angeles and New York will rebound first as advertisers seek to target prospective B2B software and direct-to-consumer customers.”
James Heller, CEO and Co-Founder, Wrapify
“In 2021, I believe we will see large brands thinking more granularly about how media is purchased. As a result, there will likely be a shift from national campaigns towards more hyperlocal campaigns as more consumers leave major metropolitan areas where the population is denser and not as conducive to the work-from-home environment. There will be a big push for transit and out-of-home advertising next year if a COVID-19 vaccine becomes available, but the challenge will be if the traditional media business will be able to handle the uptick in demand.” 
Anne Hunter, VP of Product Marketing, DISQO
“2021 will see marketers increase focus on consumer privacy as legal requirements, technology environments and consumer expectations continue to evolve. Advertisers must bring ethics to their strategies as they ready themselves for a future without cookies — and privacy can no longer simply be treated as a box to be checked in compliance.  2020 brought a reckoning to companies across numerous dimensions, from how they treated their people and customers through the pandemic to their efforts supporting inclusion and representation. Across the board, there is an increasing premium on clarity of purpose and authenticity. In 2021, this will extend further into transparency around data collection with consent and trust.”
Jo Kinsella, President, TVSquared 
“TV has undergone warp-speed acceleration, with transparent, cross-platform measurement and automation at scale empowering buyers and sellers to be more collaborative and agile than ever before. In 2021, we need to take what we learned from 2020 and continue to shake up the long-standing narrative around TV. For marketers, it means being completely data-driven with their TV campaigns – employing test-and-learn strategies to identify the right audiences and maximize reach and engagement across platforms and devices. For sellers, it’s about providing transparent, timely proof of performance and bringing next-level flexibility to planning and buying to meet advertiser demand and protect and grow ad spend.”
From Media in Perfectirishgifts
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census2023 · 1 year
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Rajasthan Population 2022 | Sex Ratio & Literacy Rate 2023 - Census 2023
As per details from the 2011 Census, Rajasthan has a population of 6.86 Crores, an increase from the figure of 5.65 Crores in the 2001 census. The total population of Rajasthan as per the latest census data is 68,548,437 of which males and females 35,550,997 and 32,997,440 respectively. In 2001, the total population was 56,507,188 males 29,420,011 and females 27,087,177. The total population growth in this decade was 21.31 percent while in the previous decade, it was 28.33 percent. The population of Rajasthan forms 5.66 percent of India in 2011. In 2001, the figure was 5.49 percent.
Rajasthan Literacy Rate 2023 The literacy rate in Rajasthan has seen an upward trend and is 66.11 percent as per the latest population census. Of that, male literacy stands at 79.19 percent while female literacy is at 52.12 percent.
Rajasthan 2022 - 2023 Population What is the population of Rajasthan in 2023? The last census of Rajasthan was done in 2011 and the next census of 2021 has been postponed or canceled. But we do have a projection of Rajasthan's 2023 Population on the basis likely Population Growth Rate.
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census2023 · 1 year
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Delhi City Population Census 2011-2023 | Delhi Population
The current estimate population of Delhi city in 2023 is 15,217,000 , while literacy rate, sex ratio and density are mentioned below. The last census was conducted in 2011 and the schedule census for Delhi city in 2021 was postponed due to Covid. The current estimates of Delhi city are based on past growth rate. For more information visit Delhi population 2023
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census2023 · 1 year
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Mumbai (Greater Mumbai) City Population Census 2011-2023 | Maharashtra
The current estimate population of Mumbai city in 2023 is 17,159,000 , while literacy rate, sex ratio and density are mentioned below. The last census was conducted in 2011 and the schedule census for Mumbai city in 2021 was postponed due to Covid. The current estimates of Mumbai city are based on past growth rate. Once govt conducts census for Mumbai city, we will update the same here in 2023. For more information visit Mumbai population 2022 - 2023
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