|
Asylum Seekers
|
88.4 |
|
[2nd of 28]
|
|
Asylum Seekers > 1990-99
|
1,879.5 |
|
[1st of 18]
|
|
DEFINITION: Total number of asylum seekers between the years 1980 and 1989. |
|
SOURCE: OECD |
|
Asylum seekers acceptance rates > 1990-99
|
9.9% |
|
[17th of 18]
|
|
DEFINITION: % of asylum seekers accepted between the years 1990 and 1999. |
|
SOURCE: OECD |
|
Foreign population
|
8.9 |
|
[8th of 27]
|
|
DEFINITION: Foreign population as % of total population; data for 2000 |
|
SOURCE: OECD |
|
Foreign population inflow
|
648.8 thousand |
|
[1st of 17]
|
|
DEFINITION: Inflows of foreign population into selected OECD countries in 2000. Data from population registers are not fully comparable because the criteria governing who gets registered differ from country to country. Counts for the Netherlands, Norway and especially Germany include substantial numbers of asylum seekers. For more details on sources, refer to the notes at the end of the Annex to the OECD statistics. |
|
SOURCE: OECD |
|
Foreign population outflow
|
562.4 thousand |
|
[1st of 13]
|
|
DEFINITION: Outflow of foreign population, in thousands of people. Data for 2000. |
|
SOURCE: OECD |
|
immigrant population > Immigrants as percentage of state population
|
12.31
|
|
[41st of 195]
|
|
DEFINITION:
|
|
SOURCE: OECD |
|
immigrant population > Number of immigrants
|
10,144,000
|
|
[3rd of 195]
|
|
DEFINITION:
|
|
SOURCE: Wikipedia: List of countries by immigrant population
|
|
immigrant population > Percentage of total number of immigrants in the world
|
5.437 |
|
|
|
DEFINITION:
|
|
SOURCE: Wikipedia: List of countries by immigrant population
|
|
Immigration to the United States > Immigration summary 1830 to 2000
|
1,967
|
|
[1st of 9]
|
|
DEFINITION:
|
View time series
|
|
SOURCE: Wikipedia: List of countries by immigrant population
|
|
Net migration rate
|
2.19 migrant(s)/1,000 populati |
|
[44th of 225]
|
|
DEFINITION: The difference between the number of persons entering and leaving a country during the year per 1,000 persons (based on midyear population). An excess of persons entering the country is referred to as net immigration (e.g., 3.56 migrants/1,000 population); an excess of persons leaving the country as net emigration (e.g., -9.26 migrants/1,000 population). The net migration rate indicates the contribution of migration to the overall level of population change. High levels of migration can cause problems such as increasing unemployment and potential ethnic strife (if people are coming in) or a reduction in the labor force, perhaps in certain key sectors (if people are leaving). |
View time series
|
|
SOURCE: Wikipedia: Immigration to the United States
|
|
New citizenships
|
186.7 thousand |
|
[3rd of 20]
|
|
DEFINITION: Thousands of people who acquired nationality in 2000. Statistics cover all means of acquiring the nationality of a country, except where otherwise indicated. These include standard naturalisation procedures subject to age, residency, etc. criteria, as well as situations where nationality is acquired through a declaration or by option (following marriage, adoption, or other situations related to residency or descent), recovery of former nationality and other special means of acquiring the nationality of a country. For more details on sources, refer to the notes at the end of the OECD Annex. |
|
SOURCE: All CIA World Factbooks 18 December 2003 to 18 December 2008 |
|
Refugees
|
1,319,200 |
|
[2nd of 110]
|
|
DEFINITION: Refugees (number in each country, 1990-99) |
|
SOURCE: OECD |
|
Refugees > Inflow 1990-99
|
976 |
|
[2nd of 18]
|
|
DEFINITION: Number of refugees accepted by each country between the years 1990 and 1999. |
|
SOURCE: United Nations World Statistics Pocketbook and Statistical Yearbook |
|
Refugees > Outflow
|
1,000 |
|
[72nd of 76]
|
|
DEFINITION: Refugees by country of origin (2000). The country of origin for many refugees is unavailable or unreported. These data may therefore be underestimates. |
|
SOURCE: OECD |
|
Refugees > US acceptance rates
|
100 |
|
[4th of 49]
|
|
DEFINITION: The number of US refugee status applications approved in the 2002 fiscal year divided by the number of applications filed in that same period. Note that the applications approved have often been filed in previous years. This explains, for example, why Ghana has a 2002 approval rate of over 100% |
|
SOURCE: UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees). 2002. Correspondence on refugees and internally displaced persons. February. Geneva. |
|
Refugees > US applications
|
1 |
|
[61st of 64]
|
|
DEFINITION: Number of refugee status applications filed in the United States in 2002, listed by country of chargeability |
|
SOURCE: Nationmaster.com calculations based on USCIS (United States Citizenship and Immigration Services) data |
|
Refugees > US applications approved
|
1 |
|
[50th of 53]
|
|
DEFINITION: Number of applications for Refugee status in the United States in the 2002 fiscal year approved. Listed by country of chargeability. |
|
SOURCE: United States Citizenship and Immigration Services |
|
to Sweden
|
40,800
|
|
[9th of 24]
|
|
DEFINITION:
|
|
SOURCE: United States Citizenship and Immigration Services |
|
US visa lottery winners
|
1,227 US visa lottery winners |
|
[28th of 178]
|
|
DEFINITION: The annual United States Diversity Visa program makes permanent residence visas available to persons meeting the strict eligibility requirements. Applicants for Diversity Visas are chosen by a computer-generated random lottery drawing. The visas are distr |
|
SOURCE: Wikipedia: Demographics of Sweden
|