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The official history of Britain : our story in numbers as told by the Office for National Statistics / Boris Starling, with David Bradbury.

By: Starling, Boris [author.].Contributor(s): Bradbury, David J. (David John), 1956- [author.].Publisher: London : HarperCollinsPublishers, 2020Description: 298 pages : tables, maps and charts (black and white).Content type: text | still image | cartographic image Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780008412197.Subject(s): Great Britain. Office for National Statistics | Great Britain -- Social conditions -- 19th century | Great Britain -- Social conditions -- 20th century | Great Britain -- Social conditions -- Statistics -- 1945- | Great Britain -- Census -- History | Great Britain -- Census, 2021DDC classification: 941.08 Summary: "In 1841 there were 734 female midwives working in Britain, along with 9 artificial eye makers, 20 peg makers, 6 stamp makers and 1 bee dealer. Fast forward nearly two centuries and there are 51,000 midwives working in the UK and not an eye maker in sight! For the past two centuries, through the Census and national surveys, the Office for National Statistics and its predecessors have charted the lives of the British : our jobs, home lives and strange cultural habits. With questions on occupation, housing, religion, travel and family, the Census findings have informed the economy, politics, and every other national matter. Its collected data forms the single most valuable ongoing historical resource of modern times. Now, for the first time ever, 'The Official History of Britain' collects these findings into a wonderfully written and entertaining book by Boris Starling and assisted by the ONS’ statistical advisor, David Bradbury. Delving deep into statistics surrounding our occupations, our working lives, relationships; our quirks, habits, weird interests and cultural beliefs, and, of course, the latest findings on the Covid-19 pandemic, The Official History of Britain places Britain under the microscope and asks who we are and how we’ve changed as a nation."-- Taken from dust jacket.
Holdings
Item type Current library Class number Status Date due Barcode
Book House of Lords Library - Palace Dewey 941.08 STA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 019745

"Office for National Statistics, Census 2021" - on title-page.

"In 1841 there were 734 female midwives working in Britain, along with 9 artificial eye makers, 20 peg makers, 6 stamp makers and 1 bee dealer. Fast forward nearly two centuries and there are 51,000 midwives working in the UK and not an eye maker in sight! For the past two centuries, through the Census and national surveys, the Office for National Statistics and its predecessors have charted the lives of the British : our jobs, home lives and strange cultural habits. With questions on occupation, housing, religion, travel and family, the Census findings have informed the economy, politics, and every other national matter. Its collected data forms the single most valuable ongoing historical resource of modern times. Now, for the first time ever, 'The Official History of Britain' collects these findings into a wonderfully written and entertaining book by Boris Starling and assisted by the ONS’ statistical advisor, David Bradbury. Delving deep into statistics surrounding our occupations, our working lives, relationships; our quirks, habits, weird interests and cultural beliefs, and, of course, the latest findings on the Covid-19 pandemic, The Official History of Britain places Britain under the microscope and asks who we are and how we’ve changed as a nation."-- Taken from dust jacket.

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