An updated constituency/deprivation chart for England for the 2019 general election - looks quite different to before. See following tweets for comparison with 2017 and 2001 #ge2019#ge2019data
@BrownPhilip here are the 2017 and 2001 versions of the same chart, side by side (2001 on the right stands out visually as proper red wall stuff)
@BrownPhilip and here's a quick and dirty gif comparing 2001, 2017 and 2019 (2 seconds per frame)
just need to add that what we refer to in the UK as 'deprivation' is similar to what others might call disadvantage or similar - so in US context, for example, areas on the left of the chart would be perhaps rust belt towns, parts of Appalachia, Mississippi and so on
the so-called red wall in 2001 was interrupted by just a single orange block, quite striking from today's vantage point
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I saw this Met Office 'UK climate districts map' online so naturally I decided to try and figure out the population of each area whilst eating my lunch and these are the incredibly interesting results
there is also the Met Office "climate regions" map but that's a can of worms that I don't want to open, not least because of the unwavering England N / England S line
Okay, some European population density stuff now - starting with the top 100 1km grid squares by population across Europe, based on the most recent Eurostat data - more to follow
these are the top 3 by density, but I've shared a web folder with all 1km grid squares with more than 30,000 people living in them, as well as the top square in each of the 38 countries in the dataset
Topical retweet because I've been watching The Rig but also the news - I remember first seeing these when I was about 10 when playing football in Invergordon and we couldn't believe the size of them
Another very interesting recent England and Wales Census 2021 release is the passport data, so here's a map of % with no passport at MSOA level, will add a couple more below
these are all the different columns in the dataset (TS005Passports held) and the patterns are quite interesting, although I've only done a few maps as a way to explore the data
Today's census map shows the most common housing tenure in each local authority in England and Wales 🏡
I'm working on my spelling of mortgage, probably due to the shock of seeing how many households own without a mortgage!
most common by area is of course a very first-past-the-posty representation of things but I'm interested in the pattern precisely because of this - will fix typo later, perhaps I should do by constituency too
More Census age data today - a little animation of % by single year of age in each local authority. Probably needs a few watches to sink in - lots in here - but the final 10 seconds I find quite sombre, and you'll NEVER guess when lots of people leave home
and, just to go all dataviz retro, here are all the frames as small multiples
nerd note: lots of ways to make small multiples from image sets but I tend to use ImageMagick, and the image above was created using this command: