Donald Bogue

American sociologist and demographer (1918–2014) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Donald Joseph Bogue (1918–2014) was an American sociologist and demographer.

Born1918
Independence, Missouri
Died2014(2014-00-00) (aged 95–96)
Dyer, Indiana
OccupationsSociologist and Demographer
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Donald Joseph Bogue
Born1918
Independence, Missouri
Died2014(2014-00-00) (aged 95–96)
Dyer, Indiana
OccupationsSociologist and Demographer
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Bogue was born in Utah and raised on a farm near Independence, Missouri.[1][2] He earned his bachelor's degree in sociology from the University of Iowa in 1939, and completed a master's degree in the same subject at Washington State College the following year.[3][4] Between 1942 and 1946, Bogue was a statistician for the United States Navy.[3][4] After World War II ended, Bogue authored the 1949 doctoral dissertation The Structure of the Metropolitan Community: A Study of Dominance and Subdominance under the direction of Amos Hawley at the University of Michigan.[5][6]

Bogue began his research work in 1947, with the Scripps Foundation for Research in Population Problems at Miami University, then joined the University of Chicago in 1954, where he became a full professor in 1958 and remained for the rest of his career.[3][4][1] He was elected a fellow of the American Statistical Association in 1956.[7] Bogue was the president of the Population Association of America from 1963 to 1964,[8] and founded the organization's flagship academic journal, Demography, serving as chief editor from 1964 to 1968.[5][9]

Bogue was married to Elizabeth Mullen from 1944 to her death in 1973.[1] He died in Dyer, Indiana, on 21 April 2014, aged 96.[1][2] A collection of Bogue's papers is held at the University of Chicago Library.[10]

Selected publications

  • Bogue, Donald J. (1985) [1959]. The Population of the United States. Free Press.[11]
  • Bogue, Donald J. (1963). Skid Row in American Cities. University of Chicago Press.[12]
  • Burgess, Ernest W.; Bogue, Donald J., eds. (1964). Contributions to Urban Sociology. University of Chicago Press.[13]
  • Bogue, Donald J., ed. (1967). Sociological Contributions to Family Planning Research. Community and Family Study Center, University of Chicago.[14]
  • Bogue, Donald J. (1969). Principles of Demography. John Wiley and Sons.[15]
  • Bogue, Donald J., ed. (1970). Further Sociological Contributions to Family Planning Research. Community and Family Study Center, University of Chicago.[16]
  • Bogue, Donald J.; Liegel, Gregory; Kozloski, Michael (2009). Immigration, Internal Migration, and Local Mobility in the U.S. Edward Elgar Publishing. ISBN 9781848444089.[17]

References

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