Anglesey Arfor programme projects with business name, reference ID, address, postcode, place name, and bilingual project descriptions. English text is machine-translated from Welsh using Bing Translator.
WIMD is the Welsh Government’s official measure of relative deprivation for small areas in Wales. It is designed to identify those small areas where there are the highest concentrations of several different types of deprivation. Deprivation is the lack of access to opportunities and resources which we might expect in our society. This can be in terms of material goods or the ability of an individual to participate in the normal social life of the community. An Index is a group of separate measurements which are combined into a single number. WIMD is currently made up of eight separate domains (or types) of deprivation: - Income - Employment - Health - Education - Access to Services - Housing - Community Safety - Physical Environment Each of the domains include several indicators of deprivation. WIMD ranks all small areas in Wales from 1 (most deprived) to 1,909 (least deprived). It does not provide a measure of the level of deprivation in an area. Other WIMD resources WIMD rank and indicator data is available for download from StatsWales. The WIMD area of our Statistics and research website includes previous releases of data as well as latest news and updates. You can also find: WIMD 2019 data summaries, including our main Results Report WIMD 2019 Guidance and Technical Reports Geospatial information on WIMD 2019 on the “DMW” geo-portal for Wales WIMD 2019 Interactive tool
The data here shows indicator data (that underlies the Welsh Index of Multiple Deprivation or WIMD), broken down by age. WIMD is the Welsh Government's official measure of relative deprivation for small areas in Wales. It is designed to identify small areas where there are the highest concentrations of several different types of deprivation. The full index is only updated every 4 to 5 years but some of the indicators are updated in the interim period. Most indicators are available down to Lower Super Output Area level. This is a geography that is built from census data - it aims to outline small areas with a population between 1,000 and 3,000 people.
Anglesey Council Employment Allocation.
Menter Mon's Cyclone project promotes a circular economy and focuses on repairing, reusing, regenerating and changing behaviours to reduce woes. By running a circular campaign and running upskilling workshops for the community to be able to create and repair. This dataset shows the location of workshops which took place as part of this project.