July 19, 2004
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MEDIA CONTACT: Pamela Higgins
(410) 516-8337
pamela.higgins@jhu.edu
KNOW THY BALTIMORE NEIGHBORHOOD
Project Puts Census Demographic
Profiles at Your Fingertips
So you would like to know more about where you live? Thanks to the efforts of
eight local institutions, there are now demographic profiles for 239 Baltimore
City neighborhood areas on the Internet. Led by the Johns Hopkins University's
Sheridan Libraries, the partner institutions obtained a special tabulation of
the 2000 Census data for Baltimore neighborhoods.
Profiles include more than 400 characteristics such as population, social and economic characteristics related to race, income, education and occupation for neighborhood areas from Abell to Yale Heights and everything in between.
"This initiative provides vital data to researchers, city planners, and community organizations," said Winston Tabb, dean of university libraries at Johns Hopkins. "I am delighted that the collaborative efforts of the City government and area universities have placed Baltimore among the few cities in the nation to participate in this program."
Sandra Newman, director of the Institute for Policy Studies at Johns Hopkins, said, "I am a devoted user of census data for Baltimore in my own research and in the Baltimore Policy ProjectCan annual public policy analysis assignment I include in my public policy analysis graduate course each fall. Since much of our work focuses on neighborhoods, having these data organized at the neighborhood level will be an enormous asset."
To access the information, go to: http://censusdata.bnia.org
In addition to the Johns Hopkins Sheridan Libraries, the other organizations
on the project are the Baltimore City Department of Planning , the Baltimore
City Department of Housing and Community Development, the Baltimore Memory Study
at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, the Baltimore Neighborhood
Indicators Alliance, the Center for Urban Environmental Research and Education
at UMBC, the Institute for Urban Research, Morgan State University, and the
University of Maryland Geography Division.
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