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Data Provider: Welsh Government Accredited Official Statistics WIMD Child Index 2008: Local Authority analysis
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Domain[Filtered]
Year[Filtered]
Measure1
Group[Filter]
Local authority[Filter]
Click here to sortNumber of LSOAsThe number of LSOAs in the local authority.Click here to sort% of LSOAs in most deprived 10%The percentage of the local authority\'s LSOAs in the most deprived 10% of all Welsh LSOAs.Click here to sort% of LSOAs in most deprived 20%The percentage of the local authority\'s LSOAs in the most deprived 20% of all Welsh LSOAs.Click here to sort% of LSOAs in most deprived 30%The percentage of the local authority\'s LSOAs in the most deprived 30% of all Welsh LSOAs.Click here to sort% of LSOAs in most deprived 50%The percentage of the local authority\'s LSOAs in the most deprived 50% of all Welsh LSOAs.
Isle of Anglesey445162557
Gwynedd75441144
Conwy716182449
Denbighshire5810162450
Flintshire924152336
Wrexham8511182744
Powys80031025
Ceredigion47241551
Pembrokeshire717101855
Carmarthenshire112582153
Swansea14712263343
Neath Port Talbot9111273860
Bridgend859202951
The Vale of Glamorgan783142135
Rhondda Cynon Taf15214284063
Merthyr Tydfil3622365383
Caerphilly1109193764
Blaenau Gwent4711345368
Torfaen608253855
Monmouthshire58021021
Newport9421364555
Cardiff20321324050

Metadata

Local authority analysis for Child Index 2011 SIEQ0061

Social Justice

The Welsh Index of Multiple Deprivation 2011: Child Index is the official measure of relative deprivation for small areas in Wales for children. The indicators included in the Child Index are focussed on the child population and the types of deprivation which might be expected to affect them. The Child Index was developed as a tool to identify and understand deprivation in children in Wales, so that funding, policy, and programmes can be effectively focussed on children in the most disadvantaged communities. The Child Index 2011 updates the Child Index published in 2008, without imposing methodological changes, except where data provision makes this unavoidable.

The Child Index is produced as a set of ranks, with a rank of 1 assigned to the most deprived area. Ranks are a relative system of measurement; we can know which areas are more (or less) deprived than others, but not by how much. This is because of the way that the Index must be constructed.

Child Index Local Authority

Name

LA analysis Child Index 2011 SIEQ0061