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  1. SoSmartKappa on

    Does this count only lawful citizens? If not, then what percentage are Ukranians for example?

  2. What does “EU or native” mean?

    If the *actual* statistic being measured is “both parents not born in the EU” why is the word “native” there too?

    Also, what’s the difference between an EU country and an “EU-Reporting country”?

  3. Few-Audience9921 on

    When did Serbia join. Or does this mean „Christian heritage“? If so wtf is going on with Bosnia.

  4. InteractionWide3369 on

    That’s not what most people understand heritage as, if your 4 grandparents are German, your parents were born in say the US (or any other non EU country) and you’re born in Germany your heritage is very clearly German and from the EU but this map would exclude you.

    Also what if your parents are EU citizens born abroad?

    This is a very poorly justified map which still kinda illustrates what we all know in a competent way (by pure chance though). The map by itself is ok but the source and the intended meaning don’t correlate as you’d expect.

  5. I think its not true. Like in Poland, there are 2 -1.5 million Ukrainians, and thats alone is around 3-5% of the population. But most Ukrainians in Poland are younger people in working age, so this number should be bigger? Or its before war? Or maybe Ukraine is „native country“ while being outside EU?

  6. Thing is, that countries like Germany, who have a large globalised industry who send workers abroad to their factories, also have a lot of people who’s families have been native to the country for centuries, that are born outside of the country. The only reason is, that their parents worked there for a while.

  7. mischling2543 on

    Impressed with Denmark god damn. They’re the only one in northwest Europe with decent numbers. Yet more proof that you don’t need mass immigration from the third world to maintain a strong industrialized economy and quality of life.

  8. OrganicVlad79 on

    I’m in Ireland and didn’t realise it was that high. Where is the 23% from? India?

  9. autoklaasipuhastaja on

    Being born in the territory of the country =/= native heritage

    This is a huge difference for Estonia and Latvia as the Soviet occupation era illegal Russian colonists are definitely not native and neither are their children as most of them remain unintegrated into the Estonian and Latvian societies.

  10. AdventurousSwim1381 on

    How many generations does it take to be considered native?

    In many countries, people are already third- or fourth-generation descendants of non-EU immigrants.

  11. szczur_nadodrza on

    Definitely wrong for Poland because it seems to be using 2021 census data which only counted citizens.

  12. Please don’t use the same colour for the sea as for countries without data 🙈

  13. Routine_Ad_2695 on

    On Spain I’m surprised is not higher, we have lots of young latinoamericans either as first generation or born here as second generation. We are at the same level as Germany or Austria, but that’s only let me think they have received a ton of refugees

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