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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-019 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Usual hours worked by sex, industry, class of worker, Canada, province, monthly, unadjusted. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-013 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Part-time employment by reason for part-time work (based on new definition), age group, sex, Canada, province, monthly, unadjusted. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-014 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Part-time employment by reason for part-time work (based on new definition), age group, sex, Canada, province, annual average. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-015 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Usual hours worked by age groups, sex, main and all jobs, Canada, province, monthly, unadjusted. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-016 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Usual hours worked by age groups, sex, main and all jobs, Canada, province, annual average. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-017 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Actual hours worked by age groups, sex, main and all jobs, Canada, province, monthly, unadjusted. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-018 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Actual hours worked by age groups, sex, main and all jobs, Canada, province, annual average. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-010 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Labour force estimates by detailed occupation, sex, Canada, province, annual average. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-011 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Employment by class of worker, public and private sector, sex, industry, Canada, province, monthly, unadjusted. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-012 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Employment by class of worker, public and private sector, sex, industry, Canada, province, annual average. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-005 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Labour force estimates of full- and part-time students during school months by age groups, sex, Canada, province, monthly, unadjusted. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-006 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Labour force estimates of students during summer months by age groups, sex, Canada, province, monthly, unadjusted. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-007 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Labour force estimates by detailed industry, sex, age group, Canada, province, monthly, unadjusted. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-008 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Labour force estimates by detailed industry, sex, age group, Canada, province, annual average. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-009 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Labour force estimates by detailed occupation, sex, Canada, province, monthly, unadjusted. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-004 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Labour force estimates by educational attainment, age group, sex, Canada, province, annual average. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-003 |
LFHR – Labour Force Historical Review Labour force estimates by educational attainment, age group, sex, Canada, province, monthly, unadjusted. |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-002 |
LFHR - Labour Force Historical Review Labour force estimates by detailed age groups, sex, Canada, province, annual average. |
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2008 Family Tables 1 to 18 CD Toronto |
Census Families - xls tables 1 to 18 - SAAD – Small Area (Tax Filer) Family Data Tables 2008 Toronto |
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71F0004XVB_2010_Table-001 |
LFHR – Labour Force Historical Review 2010
Labour force estimates by detailed age groups, sex, Canada, province, monthly, unadjusted. |
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Canadian Business Patterns (2010-12) |
Description Canadian Business Patterns (CBP) data count the number of businesses "establishments", by North American Industrial Classification System (NAICS, tables at the 2, 3, 4, and 6 digit level), and by employment size ranges (including "indeterminate"). CBP allows users to understand the count, number of workers, and industry, of businesses within a given Census geography. For further information on "establishments", see Page 8 of this Statistics Canada guide.
Scale Census Tract, Census Subdivision, Census Division, Census Metropolitan Area / Census Agglomeration, Province, Country
Extent Canada
Date December 2010 |
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2009_62F0041-45 |
Survey of Household Spending in 2009 - Dwelling characteristics and household equipment by household type, Canada, 2009 |
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2009_62F0031-35 |
Survey of Household Spending in 2009 - Detailed average household expenditure, 2009 |
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Community Data Inventory |
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Catalogue Search Text Tips |
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*Members* – make sure you are logged in or you won’t be able to download.
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Use the “Search Text” box to search for specific variables (dimensions) in a data table, keywords in a table title, or Statistics Canada catalog number. Click the “Tips” link above the box for more information.
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To select or unselect multiple items from a field list, press the CTRL key and mouse right click at the same time.
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The Geography and Data Source lists are especially useful for narrowing a search to get more useful results.
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If you are searching for tables that contain data customized to your community’s *unique geography* (neighbourhoods, wards, planning districts, health districts, etc.) look for the word “Custom”. A full list of geography acronyms and custom geographies is available here. Not all geographies are available for all tables.
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More information about data sources is available here.
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Keywords are taken from the 2006 Census variable definitions. Statistics Canada's A to Z list of variable categories is available here – to acess the definition for each variable, please click the "?" before each variable name on that page.
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Topics are based on the release topics from StatCan here. Please note not all data tables are assigned to a topic.
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It is possible to combine these different criteria (keywords, geography, data source, year and/or topic). Only the tables that match all the different criteria will appear in the search results.
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Once you have found the file(s) you want to download:
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Click the checkbox next to the files you want.
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Scroll down the list and click the “Add selections to cart” button.
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You will see a message that the files have been added to your cart. You will also see your cart status on the left hand side.
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Click “Checkout” (or “View cart” if you want to delete items first). A link will then be sent to you by email for your files or you can click the link at the bottom of the Order Complete message.
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To download the currently viewed list of products, click either the CSV or XLS icon
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If you select XLS first save the file, rename it from yourfilename.xls to yourfilename.xlsx (add the x on the end), then try to open it.
If you need help with your searches or downloading, please post a question in the forums or send an e-mail. We also host occasional teleconference workshops on searching. Please see calendar or event list. If you don’t see one coming up or can’t make the next one, please post in the forum and we will try to accommodate your needs. |
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Geographies |
Community Data Program Data are available at various levels of geography. Not all geographies are available for all tables. The following gives an overview of geographies. All the Geographic files are available from the Member's Data Catalog.
Geography Guides
Standard geography definitions
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CMA: Census Metropolitain Area; combines nearby municipalities
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CSD: Census Sub Division; single municipality
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FSA: Forward Sortation Area, first three digits of the postal code
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CT: Census Tract; generally has population of 2,000-8,000 persons
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DA: Dissemination Area (each CT usually has 3-10 DAs); smallest geography produced by StatCan
Custom geographies (2006 Census)
Ontario Custom includes:
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Region of Halton – Planning Districts (43), Wards (20) and Policing zones (46)
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City of Hamilton – Former Municipalities (6), Wards (15), Urban Rural (2) and Planning Units (237)
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City of Ottawa – Wards (23), Planning Areas (20)
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Region of Peel – Wards (26)
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City of Toronto – Wards (44), Former Municipalities (6), and Neighbourhoods (140)
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Regional Municipality of Waterloo – Planning Districts (110)n Neighbourhoods (??)
Western Custom includes:
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City of Calgary - Health Region (1) and City Community Districts (244)
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City of Edmonton – Neighbourhoods (350)
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Metro Vancouver: Urban Centres (26)
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City of Winnipeg – N'bourhood Characterization Areas (230), Electoral Wards (15), Electoral Committee Areas (5), WHRA N'bourhood Clusters (25), WHRA Community Areas (12), River East (w/o E.St.Paul) & Seven Oaks (w/o W.St.Paul) (2), WRHA Authority Area (1), Downtown (Aggregate of defined NCAs) (1), Inner City (Aggregate of defined NCAs) (1), Non-Inner City (City - Inner City NCAs) (1), Total City of Winnipeg (All NCAs) (1), Wpg Urban Region (1), Non-Wpg Urban Region (Aggregate 21 Satellite Centres Only) (1), Tribal Councils (7), Health Municipalities (273), Satellite Centres around Winnipeg (Aggregate of 9 Centres) (1) and Community Centres Areas (71)
Quebec Custom includes:
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City of Montreal – CSLC (28) and Boroughs (29)
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Benefits of Joining |
Access, infrastructure, community
Access to municipal and community data is not always easy or affordable, nor has the infrastructure for cataloguing and accessing data always been available until the formation of the Community Data Program. Becoming a member of our consortia provides access to hard-to-get data at sub-municipal scales, data that can inform public policy, community-based research, community-based planning, and evidence-based decision-making.
Our website provides a hub for consortia members to not only access data, but to also access the 800+ users across the county. One of the great benefits to our members is their ability to find a community of practice – from city sectors to nonprofit and research sectors. Local consortia meet regularly, have community events, and share resources.
The Community Data Program website also provides a variety of ways to share information – from our newsfeed/blog to consortia-specific pages – keeping members engaged and connected to the information they need.
Program Benefit Highlights
....Broadening access to valuable neighbourhood-level social data for hundreds of municipal governments and voluntary sector organizations
Based on formal agreements put in place with community consortia, the Community Data Program makes valuable social data available to over 400 organizations in over 20 urban regions, including more than 50 Canadian cities and towns located across Canada. Each consortium brings together anywhere from 5 to 50 members, including municipal governments, social-planning networks, health and family service agencies, school boards, police services, and United Ways.
...Negotiating a new data-package agreement with Statistics Canada on behalf of community consortia
A new data-package agreement was negotiated with Statistics Canada and ratified by members. The package includes over 700 data tables from both Census and non-Census sources, with a wide range of small and customized geographies. Non-Census tables are derived from the Survey of Household Spending, Labour Force Survey, Small Area and Administrative Data, Canadian Business Patterns, Canadian Crime Statistics, and Health Public Use Microdata.
...Supporting the development of a streamlined web-based data dissemination system between Statistics Canada and CDP consortia
Legal agreements between the Community Data Program and local consortia, which lay out terms and conditions and web-based tools and protocols for accessing and downloading data tables, were created to facilitate efficient data dissemination. The data include a national atlas, which displays the distribution of thousands of data tables; regional atlases, which display, for each consortium, the regional distribution (at the CT or DA level) of those indicators; the Inventory of Community Data sources; the data tables; and a catalog that permits users to locate and select the tables they require.
...Providing technical support to community consortia
The Community Data Program has created web-based tools to support consortium members, including an in-depth online help feature that explains: (1) How to use statistical data (including how to use Beyond 2020 Software), (2) How to use the Consortium web tools (including the online Atlas of Social Data), and (3) How to use Census Data. In addition to the help files, there are over three dozen links in a Community Data Inventory, a Helpful Tips section, and a FAQ page related to using data and the site. All consortia members have e-mail and telephone access to the CCSD technical team and associated consultants.
...Supporting the sharing of experience, learning, and tools
The Community Data Program is structured to encourage regular and active interaction and communication among and within community consortia. The Program brings together community data consortia from across Canada, providing important opportunities for learning and sharing experiences and perspectives around the use of social data to meet community challenges. The website makes available collaborative tools, including a members contact list, a members-only discussion forum, and links to local reports prepared by community consortia (see each consortia page) using community data. The local consortium lead organizations constitute a nationwide “hub and spoke” network of community-based social-data users. The pivotal role played by municipalities contributes valuable technical knowledge and support to local community organizations.
...Strengthened local social programs and policies
Public policy at the municipal, provincial, and federal levels benefits from new tools and information developed by community-based projects informed by social data. The customized data tables available through the Community Data Program have allowed data users to pursue a wide range of evidence-based analysis for informed decision-making.
With the Community Data Program data-acquisition and dissemination infrastructure in place, we are ready to attract new members. Increasing access to different sources community, neighbourhood and local scale data is being pursued through Community Data Canada with Statistics Canada and the Federation of Canadian Municipalities.
The Community Data Program is led by the Canadian Council on Social Development (CCSD). |
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How We Do It |
Purchase data, train people, communicate
We group purchase data from Statistics Canada and make the data easily accessible from our data catalog. We also do capacity building with members of the Community Data Consortium and the social sector on how to use, share, and access data, as well as on protocols and licensing ethics. Finally, we provide a large network of community-data users whose ideas, resources, and practices can be shared.
The CSDS is made up of three components
1. Purchasing Data and Facilitating Access
Local organizations require social and economic data to make vital decisions about their planning needs, strategic forecasting, and information delivery. Through the Community Data Consortium, the social-data needs of municipalities and community based organizations are reviewed and appropriate sources of data identified. The Consortium then brings together project partners with similar data needs in order to maximize their collective buying power and to help them gain access to particular kinds of data previously unaffordable to the individual organizations.
2. Training People and Building Capacity
The Community Data Consortium reviews, enhances, and creates thorough training programs available for individuals who will be handling and analyzing the data within those organizations. Raw data requires competent and thorough analysis and interpretation before it can be put to good use by organizations and communities. The Consortium — working in collaboration with Statistics Canada — has developed training initiatives, building on the capacity of partner organizations to access data and to use the data for their particular purposes.
3. Communicating and Disseminating
Sharing information and best practices among municipalities, community based organizations, and other partners in the Community Social Data Strategy, is an important ingredient for success. A variety of communication vehicles are used to encourage partners to share the results of their data analysis. These include personal consultations, regular correspondence by mail and e-mail, the use of newsletters, and the Internet – methods that effectively support a strong communications network.
Visit our members page to learn more about the Working Groups that make all this happen.
The Community Data Consortium is led by the Canadian Council on Social Development (CCSD). |
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What We Do |
Enable decision-making and policy development
Access to community-based data is not always easy, or even affordable, for individual community based organizations. Yet, community data are what municipalities and community based organizations need for informing their decision-making and policy development.
The Community Data Program (CDP) provides a gateway for municipalities and community based organizations to access data from Statistics Canada and other small-area data providers. We collaborate with community groups and municipalities across the country to identify data needs and then negotiate special consortia-data licenses with Statistics Canada and other providers. We then disseminate those data back to members via our data catalog. We are also working to acquire tools that help users interpret the data. Access to this type of data enables municipalities and community based organizations to identify and better understand the social and economic trends within their individual communities, helping them in decision-making and policy development.
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Who We Are |
A Gateway to data
The Community Data Program (CDP) is a gateway for municipalities and community based organizations to access data from Statistics Canada and other institutions in order to identify and better understand the social and economic trends within their individual communities.
The Community Data Program is led by the Canadian Council on Social Development (CCSD). The CCSD is a non-governmental, not-for-profit organization that develops and promotes progressive social policies inspired by social justice, equality, and the empowerment of individuals and communities through research, consultation, public education, and advocacy.
The Community Data Program has been serving the community for 3 census cycles, or 15 years.
With the Program data-acquisition and dissemination infrastructure in place, we are ready to attract new members. Increasing access to different sources community, neighbourhood and local scale data is being pursued through Community Data Canada with Statistics Canada and the Federation of Canadian Municipalities.
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Get the latest news! Click here for our newsfeed/blog.
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Join the conversation! Click here to visit our discussion Forum.
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gda_3543b06a_e |
Cartographic boundaries for dissemination areas of CD 3543 - Simcoe |
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gda_935b06a_e |
Cartographic boundaries for dissemination areas of CMA 935 - Victoria |
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gda_933b06a_e |
Cartographic boundaries for dissemination areas of CMA 933 - Vancouver |
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gda_835b06a_e |
Cartographic boundaries for dissemination areas of CMA 835 - Edmonton |
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gda_825b06a_e |
Cartographic boundaries for dissemination areas of CMA 825 - Calgary |
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gda_602b06a_e |
Cartographic boundaries for dissemination areas of CMA 602 - Winnipeg |
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gda_590b06a_e |
Cartographic boundaries for dissemination areas of CMA 590 - Sault Ste. Marie |
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gda_555b06a_e |
Cartographic boundaries for dissemination areas of CMA 555 - London |
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gda_541b06a_e |
Cartographic boundaries for dissemination areas of CMA 541 - Kitchener |
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gda_537b06a_e |
Cartographic boundaries for dissemination areas of CMA 537 - Hamilton |
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gda_535b06a_e |
Cartographic boundaries for dissemination areas of CMA 535 - Toronto |
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gda_529b06a_e |
Cartographic boundaries for dissemination areas of CMA 529 - Peterborough |
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gda_505b06a_e |
Cartographic boundaries for dissemination areas of CMA 505 - Ottawa-Gatineau |
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gda_462b06a_e |
Cartographic boundaries for dissemination areas of CMA 462 - Montreal |
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gct_000b06a_e |
Canada CT cartographic boundaries |
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92-156-XBB_da-sd_corr |
Dissemination Area correspondence file |
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92-156-XBB_db-sd_corr |
Dissemination Block correspondence file |
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2006_2001_CT_conversion_GEO |
2006-2001 Census Tract Conversion File |
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92-156-GIE2006001 |
Correspondence Files Reference Guide Census year 2006 |
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92-196-XIE2006001 |
Geography Catalogue Census year 2006, First edition |