The US accounts for 73 percent of 139 mass shootings that occurred in developed countries between 1998 to 2019, according to a new study. Each has fewer than 40,000 Hispanics.A study on mass shootings in developed countries showed that 101 out of 139 attacks took place in the US between 19, leading to 816 deaths. The two youngest states by median age, South Dakota (23) and North Dakota (24), have among the smallest Hispanic populations in the country. The two most populated Hispanic states, California and Texas, have median ages of 30 and 29, respectively.Īmong the 12 states with more than 1 million Hispanics, North Carolina (25 years), Georgia (27), Pennsylvania (28) and Arizona (28) have the lowest median ages. The four states with the highest median ages also have some of the nation’s largest Hispanic populations: Florida (36 years), New York (33), New Mexico (33) and New Jersey (32).
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States with large Hispanic populations have highest median ages The District of Columbia’s Hispanic population grew by 42%, to 79,500 in 2019.
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South Dakota (up 66% to 37,400), Montana (up 50% to 43,300) and New Hampshire (up 48% to 54,600) had the next fastest increases. North Dakota saw its Hispanic population more than double (129% increase) to 31,500 in 2019, the fastest growth of any state. Several states with Hispanic populations of less than 100,000 had some of the fastest increases from 2010 to 2019. Four of these states have had the slowest Hispanic population growth in the U.S. Of the 12 states with at least 1 million Hispanics, Pennsylvania saw the fastest population growth, 38% from 2010 to 2019. The South has accounted for nearly half (48%) of Latino population growth since 2010. No state saw a decrease in Hispanics.īy region, the South saw the fastest growth in Latino population, increasing by 26% from 2010 to 2019, followed by the Northeast (18%), Midwest (18%) and West (14%). The smallest increases came in West Virginia (8,800), Wyoming (8,100), Maine (6,700) and Vermont (3,400). Hispanic population growth during this time. These states accounted for half (50%) of U.S. The three states with the most Hispanics also had the biggest increases of this population from 2010 to 2019: Texas (2.0 million increase), California (1.5 million) and Florida (1.4 million). The states that have surpassed 1 million Latinos since 2010 are Georgia, New Mexico, North Carolina and Pennsylvania. Twelve states had Latino populations of more than 1 million in 2019, up from eight in 2010. Florida has 5.7 million Latinos, the third-highest total in the country. Major Latino populations are also dispersed around the country. Together, the four border states were home to 50% of U.S. In fact, the two states with the most Hispanics, California (15.6 million) and Texas (11.5 million), alone account for 45% of the nation’s Hispanic population. Some of the nation’s largest Hispanic populations are in the four states that border Mexico – California, Texas, Arizona and New Mexico. Hispanics live in Southwest border states, but fastest population growth is elsewhere In Mississippi, the Hispanic population increased by 18,100 even as its overall population was up by only 5,600. In Rhode Island, the Hispanic population jumped by 40,600 as the state population increased by only 5,400. States with much smaller populations saw similar patterns. In Pennsylvania, the Latino population jumped by 273,900, while the state’s population increased by 90,800. In New York, the number of Latinos increased by 319,500 even as the state population went up by only 53,700. In six of these states – New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New Mexico, Rhode Island and Mississippi – Latino population growth exceeded that of the overall population during this time, again largely due to declines among the white population. In 21 other states, Hispanics accounted for more than 50% of statewide population increases from 2010 to 2019. The decreases happened almost entirely among the white populations of these states (both Black and white populations declined in Illinois). In four states – Illinois, Connecticut, West Virginia and Vermont – the Latino population increased from 2010 to 2019, even though the overall state population declined during this time. These are the last population estimates before the 2020 census. Census Bureau’s Vintage 2019 population estimates for 2010-2019.
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The analysis is based on data from the U.S. As part of our ongoing research of Hispanics in the United States, we examined population changes over the past decade of racial and ethnic groups in the U.S., the 50 states and the District of Columbia.