Data

Country has a civil register

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What you should know about this indicator

Dummy variable that takes the value 1 if the country maintained a birth register that year and 0 otherwise. A civil register is a government agency that records key events in the life trajectories of individuals (such as births, marriages, and deaths). We include parish registers when they were administered by official state churches (as in the Nordic countries) but not when the Church was not part of the state (as in the Catholic world).

Country has a civil register
A civil register is defined as a government agency that records key events in the life trajectories of individuals, such as births, marriages, and deaths.
Source
Thomas Brambor et al. (2019) – with minor processing by Our World in Data
Last updated
November 20, 2023
Next expected update
January 2025
Date range
1750–2015

Sources and processing

This data is based on the following sources

Thomas Brambor, Agustín Goenaga, Johannes Lindvall and Jan Teorell created The Information Capacity Dataset for their article "The Lay of the Land: Information Capacity and the Modern State". The Information Capacity Dataset offers numerical data on five institutions and policies that modern states use to collect information about their populations and territories: (1) the regular implementation of a reliable census, (2) the regular release of statistical yearbooks, the operation of (3) civil and (4) population registers, and (5) the establishment of a government agency tasked with processing statistical information. The dataset also includes an overall index of “information capacity” for 85 polities from 1750 to 2015.

Retrieved on
November 10, 2023
Citation
This is the citation of the original data obtained from the source, prior to any processing or adaptation by Our World in Data. To cite data downloaded from this page, please use the suggested citation given in Reuse This Work below.
Brambor, Thomas, Agustín Goenaga, Johannes Lindvall and Jan Teorell (2019) "The Lay of the Land: Information Capacity and the Modern State", Comparative Political Studies, version of record published online 2019

How we process data at Our World in Data

All data and visualizations on Our World in Data rely on data sourced from one or several original data providers. Preparing this original data involves several processing steps. Depending on the data, this can include standardizing country names and world region definitions, converting units, calculating derived indicators such as per capita measures, as well as adding or adapting metadata such as the name or the description given to an indicator.

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Citations

How to cite this page

To cite this page overall, including any descriptions, FAQs or explanations of the data authored by Our World in Data, please use the following citation:

“Data Page: Country has a civil register”, part of the following publication: Bastian Herre and Pablo Arriagada (2023) - “State Capacity”. Data adapted from Thomas Brambor et al.. Retrieved from https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/country-has-a-civil-register [online resource]
How to cite this data

In-line citationIf you have limited space (e.g. in data visualizations), you can use this abbreviated in-line citation:

Thomas Brambor et al. (2019) – with minor processing by Our World in Data

Full citation

Thomas Brambor et al. (2019) – with minor processing by Our World in Data. “Country has a civil register” [dataset]. Thomas Brambor et al., “Information Capacity Dataset” [original data]. Retrieved December 3, 2024 from https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/country-has-a-civil-register