An eye-opening story of the people who make the census, the United States’ largest and most consequential dataset, and the growing threats to their crucial work.
By many measures, the US census is the government’s largest non-wartime operation, and one of the world’s oldest and biggest data-making endeavors. The 2020 census required more than a decade of planning and technical work—not to mention managing nearly a quarter of a million temporary workers simultaneously—to collect data about the American public. That data was then processed to count each of 331,449,281 residents once—and only once—and in the right place. The operation is also one of the country’s most consequential. Census data determine how political power and federal funding are allocated. Census data make politics, and consequently, politics make census data. In this urgent book, danah boyd explores what it took for the Census Bureau to make the 2020 census, amidst a global pandemic and natural disasters, and while navigating political forces that constrained the budget, micro-managed the schedule, and attacked statisticians’ methods.
| Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
| Author | danah boyd |
| Country | USA |
| Publication Date | 10/04/2026 |
| Pages | 256 |
| Edition | first |
| Size | 14.53 x 2.34 x 21.67 cm |
| About the Author | danah boyd is the Geri Gay Professor of Communication at Cornell University, where she works on topics at the intersection of technology and society. She is also the founder of the research institute Data & Society and the author of It’s Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens. |
| Publisher Address | custserv@press.uchicago.edu |
| ISBN | 9780226824970 |