Population Trends in New Jersey
392 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
6 b-w images, 61 tables
Paperback
Release Date:14 Jan 2022
ISBN:9780813588315
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Release Date:31 Jan 2022
ISBN:9780813588308
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Population Trends in New Jersey

Rutgers University Press
To fully understand New Jersey in the 2020s and beyond, it is crucial to understand its ever-changing population. This book examines the twenty-first century demographic trends that are reshaping the state now and will continue to do so in the future. But trend analysis requires a deep historical context. Present-day New Jersey is the result of a long demographic and economic journey that has taken place over centuries, constantly influenced by national and global forces. This book provides a detailed examination of this journey.  The result is present-day New Jersey.
 
The authors also highlight key trends that will continue to transform the state: domestic migration out of the state and immigration into it; increasing diversity; slower overall population growth; contracting fertility; the household revolution and changing living arrangements; generational disruptions; and suburbanization versus re-urbanization. All of these factors help place in context the result of the 2020 decennial U.S. Census.

While the book focuses on New Jersey, the Garden State is a template of demographic, economic, social, and other forces characterizing the United States in the twenty-first century.
This book is an eye-opener into the powerful economic and demographic forces that are transforming the advanced world and its cities. Drawing upon more than a century of research at the Rutgers Center for Urban Policy Research, Jim Hughes and David Listokin provide a deep dive into way these forces have shaped and reshaped New Jersey. From great battles of Colonial times to the Industrial Revolution and the world-changing inventions of Thomas Edison to mass suburbanization, deindustrialization, immigration, urban decline and the remaking of its older cities, and its signature contributions to popular culture from Frank Sinatra to Bruce Springsteen, and much more, this book shows how New Jersey is a great bellwether of change for America and the world. Richard Florida, Author of The Rise of the Creative Class and The New Urban Crisis
Labor Force Challenges: An Intense and Growing Concern,' by Michael G. McGuinness Real Estate NJ
JAMES W. HUGHES is a University Professor and Distinguished Professor, and Dean Emeritus of the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, Rutgers University, in New Brunswick, New Jersey. His books include the coauthored New Jersey’s Postsuburban Economy and the coedited America’s Demographic Tapestry: Baseline for the New Millennium (both Rutgers University Press).

DAVID LISTOKIN is a Distinguished Professor and director of the Center for Urban Policy Research at the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, Rutgers University, in New Brunswick, New Jersey. His many books include Landmarks Preservation and the Property Tax, the coauthored Development Impact Assessment, and the coedited Cities under Stress.

 
Preface and Acknowledgments 
1 Overview and Summary: A State of Unrelenting Change 
2 New Jersey Population from the Colonial Period to the Early Republic 
3 The Long-Term Decennial Growth Picture 
4 The People of New Jersey: Long-Term Diversity in Racial, Ethnic, and National Origin 
5 Population, Geography, and the “Big Six” Cities 
6 Components of Population Change 
7 The Generational Framework 
8 The Baby Boom Generation’s Enduring Legacy 
9 Generations X, Y, Z, and Alpha 
10 Generations and Age-Structure Transformations 
11 The Great Household Revolution 
12 Demographics and Income 
13 Recent Dynamics and the Future
Appendix A: Population by County in New Jersey in the Colonial Era (1726, 1738, 1745, 1772, and 1784) and as a State (1790–2018)
Appendix B: The Business Cycle and Demographics 
Appendix C: Historic Black Population, “Great Migration,” and “Reverse Great Migration” Nationwide and in New Jersey 
Appendix D: The Demographics of New Jersey Residential Housing 
Appendix E: New Jersey Population Density and Urban and Metropolitan Residence 
Notes 
References 
Index
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