The Sum of the People (How the Census Has Shaped Nations, from the Ancient World to the Modern Age)

ISBN: 9781541619340
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Overview

In April 2020, the United States will embark on what has been called "the largest peacetime mobilization in American history": the decennial population census. It is part of a long, if uneven, tradition of counting people that extends back at least three millennia. Tracing the remarkable history of the census from ancient China, through the Roman Empire, revolutionary America, and Nazi-occupied Europe, right up to today's Supreme Court battles, The Sum of the People shows how the impulse to count ourselves is universal, how the census has evolved with time, and how it has always profoundly shaped the societies we have built.

As data scientist Andrew Whitby reveals, the earliest censuses in ancient China and the Fertile Crescent had purely extractive aims: taxation and conscription. Later, as Enlightenment-era governments began to answer to citizens, the census was reinvented to support political representation and to delimit the boundaries of new nation-states. As the role of government grew through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, censuses became more complex and scientific. Census bureaus spun out dozens of other surveys, which formed the statistical foundation of modern, technocratic, data-driven government. For the first time, counting every person on the planet became a real possibility-and debates about who was counted, who was not, and what questions they were asked became the subject of intense political controversy in places from Australia to South Africa to the United States. The census at its best is a marvel of democracy, but it has at times been an instrument of exclusion, and, as in the case of Nazi Germany, a tool of tyranny and genocide.

Today, governments and businesses alike now routinely collect "big data" that would have been unimaginable just a few decades ago, prompting fears similar to those the census once provoked and leading to some to suggest that traditional censuses will soon be obsolete. The Sum of the People closes by making the case that, for all its past faults, the census can be an alternative and an antidote to a future of constant, invasive surveillance.

This book title, The Sum of the People (How the Census Has Shaped Nations, from the Ancient World to the Modern Age), ISBN: 9781541619340, by Andrew Whitby, published by Basic Books (March 31, 2020) is available in hardcover. Our minimum order quantity is 25 copies. All standard bulk book orders ship FREE in the continental USA and delivered in 4-10 business days.

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Product Details

Author:
Andrew Whitby
Format:
Hardcover
Pages:
368
Publisher:
Basic Books (March 31, 2020)
Language:
English
ISBN-13:
9781541619340
ISBN-10:
154161934X
Case Pack:
20
File:
hbgusa-hbgusa_onix21_P6678277_11132023_Complete-20231113.xml
Folder:
hbgusa
List Price:
$30.00
As low as:
$15.30
Publisher Identifier:
P-HACH
Discount Code:
A
Weight:
20.48oz
Dimensions:
6.25" x 9.5" x 1.25"

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