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A best seller for many years, this invaluable reference has been published by the ASA since 1965 and provides comprehensive information for academic administrators, advisers, faculty, students, and a host of others seeking information on social science departments in the U.S., Canada, and abroad.
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Notes: Includes all students enrolled for a master's or doctoral degree at a US institution, full- or part-time. Does not include students enrolled in joint sociology/anthropology programs. 2016 data are not reported.
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Notes: Includes all students enrolled for a master's or doctoral degree at a US institution, full- or part-time. "Other social sciences" includes geography, joint sociology/anthropology, and "social sciences, other."
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Notes: Includes all students enrolled for a master's or doctoral degree at a US institution, full- or part-time. Does not include students enrolled in joint sociology/anthropology programs.
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Notes: Includes all students enrolled for a master's or doctoral degree at a US institution, full- or part-time. Does not include students enrolled in joint sociology/anthropology programs.
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Notes: Includes all students enrolled for a master's or doctoral degree at a US institution, full- or part-time. Does not include students enrolled in joint sociology/anthropology programs.
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Notes: Includes permanent residents enrolled for a master's or doctoral degree at a US institution, full- or part-time, whose race or ethnicity is known. Does not include students enrolled in joint sociology/anthropology programs. Beginning in 2000, "Asian or Pacific Islander" is the sum of two separate categories, Asian and Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander. "More Than One Race" was first collected in 1994. Percent totals may not sum to 100 due to rounding.
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Notes: Includes students enrolled for a master's or doctoral degree at a US institution, full- or part-time. Does not include students from racial or ethnic groups with small numbers of respondents. Does not include students enrolled in joint sociology/anthropology programs. Beginning in 2000, "Asian or Pacific Islander" is the sum of two separate categories, Asian and Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander.
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Notes: Includes permanent resident students enrolled for a master's or doctoral degree at a US institution, full- or part-time, whose race or ethnicity was known. Does not include students enrolled in joint sociology/anthropology programs. Persons of color include American Indian/Alaska Native, Asian/Pacific Islander/Native Hawaiian, Black/African American, Hispanic/Latino, and More than one race.