Mnemonic: ce_position_sex_age
Applicability: Person
Type: Derived variable
Definition
A usual resident of a communal establishment is either:
- someone who lives there
- someone who works and lives there
- someone who is a family member of staff that works there and lives there
This derived variable shows the different types of communal establishment residents and categorises them by age and sex.
Classification
Total number of categories: 19
Code | Name |
---|---|
1 | Resident: Male: Aged 0 to 15 years |
2 | Resident: Male: Aged 16 to 24 years |
3 | Resident: Male: Aged 25 to 34 years |
4 | Resident: Male: Aged 35 to 49 years |
5 | Resident: Male: Aged 50 to 64 years |
6 | Resident: Male: Aged 65 to 74 years |
7 | Resident: Male: Aged 75 to 84 years |
8 | Resident: Male: Aged 85 years and over |
9 | Resident: Female: Aged 0 to 15 years |
10 | Resident: Female: Aged 16 to 24 years |
11 | Resident: Female: Aged 25 to 34 years |
12 | Resident: Female: Aged 35 to 49 years |
13 | Resident: Female: Aged 50 to 64 years |
14 | Resident: Female: Aged 65 to 74 years |
15 | Resident: Female: Aged 75 to 84 years |
16 | Resident: Female: Aged 85 years and over |
17 | Staff or owner |
18 | Family member or partner of staff or owner |
19 | Staying temporarily (no usual UK address) |
Background
Read about how we developed and tested the questions for Census 2021.
Comparability with the 2011 Census
Highly comparable
What does highly comparable mean?
A variable that is highly comparable means that it can be directly compared with the variable from the 2011 Census. The questions and options that people could choose from may be slightly different, for example the order of the options may be swapped around, but the data collected is the same.
England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland comparisons
Not comparable
This variable is not comparable as the data is not available for all countries.
What does not comparable mean?
A variable that is not comparable means that it cannot be compared for England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.
Find out more about variables produced for Census 2021 in Northern Ireland and Census 2022 in Scotland.
Census 2021 data that uses this variable
We use variables from Census 2021 data to show findings in different ways.
You can: