Structure of the population


Birthrate


Mortality


Migration and cultural composition

Most of the population (more than 88%) of the Slovenia is Slovenien. The Slovenien Constitution grants to the Hungarian populations and Italian a statute of indigenous minority, which grants seats with the National Assembly to them. The majority of the other groups come from the Yugoslavia which have immigrant after the Second world war for economic reasons. The Sloveniens are mainly roman catholics, although the country also comprises a low number of Protestant, of Christian orthodoxe, Moslem and Jewish. The Slovenien language is a Slavic language written using a Latin alphabet.

" effacés" or " radiés"

The February 26th 1992, 18.355 Yugoslavians residing as Slovenia, is nearly 1% of the inhabitants, were unobtrusive register national and transferred on that from abroad, fault of having filled a request of obtaining Slovenien nationality in the six required months, often for lack of information. 200.000 people were concerned. The unobtrusive ones lost many political rights and social attaches to the Slovenien quality of citizen. A quarter of unobtrusive tore off a " residence permit permanent" ; a law voted in 1999 regulated other lawsuits, but the essence of the problem remains. Lljubljna is inflexible, in particular under the pressure of the local extreme-right-hand side, in spite of a favorable decision in 2004 of the Slovenien Supreme court. A manifestation of unobtrusive is organized in front of the European Parliament in Brussels on November 29th, 2006 and unquestionable recourse were deposited before the European Court of the human rights in Strasbourg.


Other social indicators


Sources

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