1.13. References¶
Caron-Malenfant, E.; Lebel, A. & Martel, L. (2010), *Projections of the Diversity of the Canadian Population 2006 to 2031*, Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 91-551-X. [PDF]
Caron-Malenfant, E. & Coulombe, S. (2015), *Demosim: An Overview of Methods and Data Sources*, Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 91-621-X. [PDF]
Lutz, W., J.W. Vaupel, and D.A. Ahlburg, Eds. (1999) *Frontiers of Population Forecasting*. A Supplement to Vol. 24, 1998, Population and Development Review. New York: The Population Council.
Marois G, Sabourin P, & Belanger A (2017). *A Microsimulation Approach for Modelling the Future Human Capital of EU28 Member Countries.* IIASA Working Paper. IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria: WP-17-017 `[PDF]<http://pure.iiasa.ac.at/id/eprint/14789/1/WP-17-017.pdf>`__
Martel, L., É. Caron Malenfant, J.-D. Morency, A. Lebel, A. Bélanger, N. Bastien (2011) *Projected trends to 2031 for the Canadian labour force*, Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 11-010-X, vol. 24, no. 8 [HTML]
Morency, J-D, É. Caron-Malenfant, S. Coulombe, S. Langlois (2015) *Projections of the Aboriginal Population and Households in Canada, 2011 to 2036* - Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 91-552-X [PDF]
NIDI (2009) Bridging the Micro Macro Gap In Population Forecasting. Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute. Link to Project: https://www.nidi.nl/en/research/al/micmac/home
Spielauer, M. (2014), *The relation between education and labour force participation of Aboriginal peoples: A simulation analysis using the Demosim population projection model*, Canadian Studies in Population 41(1-2), 144–164.[PDF]
Spielauer, M. (2011), *What is social science microsimulation?*, Social Science Computer Review 29(1), 9–20. [PDF]
Stover, J., S. Kirmeyer (2001), *DemProj Version 4 - A Computer Program for Making Population Projections*, The POLICY Project Spectrum [PDF]
Van Imhoff, E. & W. Post (1998), *Microsimulation methods for population projection*, Population 10(1), 97–136. [PDF]
Willekens, F. (2001), *Theoretical and Technical Orientations Toward Longitudinal Research in the Social Sciences*, Canadian Studies in Population 28(2), 189-217 [PDF]