In the United States, because censuses are taken in years ending in 0 (zero); in Great Britain because there was a war going on.
because one of the person that works for them had died
The US Census Bureau's 1941 population estimate was 133,121,000.
because one of the person that works for them had died
The 1940 census indicates that the population of Hawaii was 423,330. I would assume the population in 1941 was slightly greater than that.
The question is somewhat ambiguous. Japan started fighting in China in 1933, so to be pedantic, we'd look at a 1930 census. From an American viewpoint, the war didn't start until the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, 7 December 1941. Hiroshima had a population of 344,000 according to the 1940 census. I can't find anything between 1910 and 1933, but the 1910 census figure was 143,000.
There never has been a worldwide census. The census in the US that was conducted in 2010 was a census of people living in the US and its possessions.
Enumeration is one possible answer. The census is another.
The census, in many places, counts the population every 10 years.
Usually every ten years (except during WW2, 1941) - latest census was on Sunday 29 April 2001, Started in 1801, and now organised through the Office of National Statistics (ONS), part of the UK Statistics Authority. Public access to the records is restricted by the 100-year rule, meaning that the 1901 Public Census is the latest data set available for public viewing. Different variations to census data for individual constituent countries of the UK (England, Wales, Scotland, North Ireland etc). http://www.ons.gov.UK/census/index.HTML
Bernice C. Richard has written: 'Nova Scotia 1770 census (some 1773 and 1787)' -- subject(s): Genealogy, Registers of births, Census, Census, 1770, Census, 1827, Census, 1818 '1850 federal census of Wabash County, Illinois' -- subject(s): Census, 1850, Registers of births, Genealogy, Census, 7th, 1850 '1850 federal census of Marshall County, Illinois' -- subject(s): Census, 1850, Registers of births, Genealogy, Census, 7th, 1850 'Nova Scotia, 1770 census' -- subject(s): Census, 1770, Registers of births, Genealogy
Raeone Christensen Steuart has written the book "Levi's Will: Hope and Courage in the Wake of the Willamette Flood". The book tells the compelling story of survival and resilience in the face of natural disaster.
by a census
buy a census