Hi folks,
I'm a bit of a newbie when in comes to ACS so apologies in advance if it all sounds a bit simple.
I'd like to replicate findings of a paper that used an indicator from the survey but so far i failed to track it down.
Authors of paper claim they used:
Our measure of neighborhood poverty rate, based on the American Community Survey (ACS) (2006 – 2010) rolling averages, is the percentage of families below the poverty line
This data were presumably linked to study participants on the neighbourhood level - participants data are using block group level to define that.
I tried searching for variables that would match it and got lost in the huge output of ACS for 2010
https://api.census.gov/data/2010/acs/acs5/variables.html
Through various other attempts I found
S1702_C02_001E - All families!!Percent below poverty level!!Estimate!!Families
DP03_0119PE - Percent!!PERCENTAGE OF FAMILIES AND PEOPLE WHOSE INCOME IN THE PAST 12 MONTHS IS BELOW THE POVERTY LEVEL!!All families
but am unable to find them on block group levels. I tried searching via tidycensus R package, via API calls and even manually through https://data.census.gov/
It seems like these data are not available on this level. Am I correct assuming that? Is it confirmed by this documetn api.census.gov/.../geography.html
As I understand, the Census API and data.census.gov don't serve any block group data from ACS summary files prior to 2013 (or so). But all releases of 5-year summary files have included block group data, and there are tables at that level for families by poverty status.Through the IPUMS NHGIS data finder, I can find the relevant 2006-2010 ACS tables by selecting data filters for [Geographic Levels = Block Group], [Years = 2006-2010] and [Topics = Families AND Poverty (Income Relative to Poverty Level)].NHGIS also has the advantage of supplying block group data in nationwide or state-level files (rather than only one county at a time). There's an NHGIS API, too.
Thank you very much @Jonathan - I haven't seen that earlier. Fantastic resource!
Just wanted to share I recently read about a new study related to poverty that I thought was pretty interesting. It's referred to as the "Alice Study" Asset Limited Income Constrained Employed is what it stands for. It's basically capturing the hidden poverty stricken individuals/ families that are caught in the trap between meeting the federal guidelines for designated poverty levels and the lower middle income individuals/ families.
It may not be useful for your current research, but thought I would share just in case. You can find more about it here. www.njhi.org/.../