Massachusetts

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About the data

In our maps, you draw your own districts and communities from a given set of units or building blocks. Common building blocks that you'll see in our modules are precincts, block groups, or blocks.Precincts are the smallest unit at which vote counts are reported. (Usually these correspond one-to-one with polling places, where you actually go to cast a vote.) Therefore, precincts are the smallest unit to use when you care about accurate election results. In a map built from precincts, you can explore recent election results and visualize the partisan lean in your state. Precinct level data can be notoriously difficult to collect!Blocks and block groups are units created by the United States Census Bureau with input from individual states. Blocks are the smallest geographic unit published by the Census Bureau, and attempt to fit neatly into the geographic features of their surroundings (e.g. interstate highways, rivers, city blocks etc.) while block groups are formed by grouping blocks together such that no two block groups share a block. The Census Bureau publishes geographic products, including revised block and block group geographies at least every decennial census, in accordance with Public Law 94-171.The Decennial Census is the nationwide tallying of every person living in the United States, and has been conducted every ten years since 1790. The final Census product is an extremely large dataset, with more than 18,000 tabulated variables, and is published at the block level. The American Community Survey (ACS) is another large dataset produced by the United States Census Bureau. To collect data, the Census Bureau surveys approximately 3.5 million households across the United States each year, and produces two data products from this survey: 1-year estimates and 5-year estimates. 1-year estimatesare estimated population statistics published for Census-designated areas with 65,000 people or more, and so is unsuitable for redistricting. The5-year estimates are estimated population statistics, including income and some demographic data, and are published at the block group level regardless of population.
UnitSourcePopulation SizeAvailable data
PrecinctsState/county government agencies500 - 3,000 votersElection results, demographics
Block groupsCensus Bureau600 - 3,000 peopleDemographics, income, homeownership, broadband access, and other ACS data
BlocksCensus Bureau0 - 600 peopleDemographics only
Demographics: Population totals, voting age population, race/ethnicityPrecincts for certain counties were not included in the shapefile provided by the Demographer's Office and were digitized from maps provided by the county. Those counties are: Boulder, Denver, Douglas, and El Paso. For Las Animas county, the voter file was geocoded and used to identify precinct boundaries. Demographic data were aggregated from the census block level and precincts were assigned to districts using the Data and Democracy Lab's proration software.

Census Block Groups

These data were obtained from the US Census Bureau. The block group shapefiles for the Nation were downloaded from the Census's TIGER/Line Shapefiles. Demographic information from the 2010 Decennial Census was downloaded at the block level from the Census API.
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