European diaspora

European diaspora
Total population
(480,000,000 +
7% of the total world population
(not counting partial European descent)
Americas – approximately 446,394,000
Oceania – 23,185,000)
Regions with significant populations
White people ancestry worldwide
 United States 223,553,265[1]
 Brazil 91,051,646[2]
 Argentina 38,900,000[3]
 Canada 25,186,890[4]
 Australia 20,982,665
 Mexico 20,100,000+[5][6]
 Colombia 18,519,500[7][8]
 Venezuela

13,169,949[9][10]

[11]
 Cuba 7,160,399[12]
 South Africa 4,472,100[13]
 Chile 3,5M-5,128,000[14][15]
 Costa Rica 3,500,000[5]
 New Zealand 3,381,076[16]
 Puerto Rico 3,064,862[17]
 Uruguay 2,851,095[18]
 Dominican Republic 2,000,000+[11]
 Bolivia 2,000,000+[11]
 Peru 1,4M-4,4M+[11][19]
 Ecuador 1,400,000+[20]
 Paraguay 1,300,000+[5]
 Nicaragua 1,000,000+[11]
Languages
Languages of Europe
Religion

Majority (Christianity, mostly Catholic and Protestant) · Atheism  · Other Religions

Non-European Ethnocultural Affiliations:
Jewish · Muslim · Buddhist · Hinduism
Related ethnic groups
Europeans

The European diaspora consists of European people and their descendants who emigrated from Europe. The diaspora is concentrated in countries such as the United States, Brazil, Argentina, Canada, Australia, Mexico, Venezuela, Colombia, Cuba, South Africa, Chile, New Zealand, Puerto Rico and Uruguay as well as smaller populations around the globe.

Emigration from Europe began on a large scale during the European colonial empires of the 18th to 19th centuries and continues to the present day. This concerns especially the Spanish Empire in the 16th to 17th centuries (expansion of the Hispanosphere), the British Empire in the 17th to 19th centuries (expansion of the Anglosphere), the Portuguese Empire and the Russian Empire in the 19th century (expansion to Central Asia and the Russian Far East).

From 1815 to 1932, 60 million people left Europe (with many returning home), primarily to "areas of European settlement" in the Americas (especially to the United States, Canada, Argentina and Brazil), Australia, New Zealand and Siberia.[21] These populations also multiplied rapidly in their new habitat; much more so than the populations of Africa and Asia. As a result, on the eve of World War One, 38% of the world’s total population was of European ancestry.[21]

In Asia, European-derived populations (specifically Russians) predominate in Northern Asia, which is part of the Russian Federation. Africa has no countries with European-derived majorities, but there are significant minorities in South Africa, Namibia and some regions of other countries like Madagascar, Botswana and Morocco.

The countries in the Americas that received a major wave of European immigrants from 1870 to 1960 were: the United States (27 million), Argentina (6.5 million), Brazil (5 million), Canada (4 million), Venezuela (more than 1 million),[22] Cuba (610,000), Uruguay (600,000); other countries received a more modest immigration flow (accounting for less than 10% of total European emigration to Latin America) were: Chile (183,000),[23] and Peru (150,000),[24][25][26][27]

Early emigration

Colonial period

Further information: History of colonialism and Greater Europe

The discovery of the Americas in 1492 stimulated a steady stream of voluntary migration from Europe. About 200,000 Spaniards settled in their American colonies prior to 1600, a small settlement compared to the 3 to 4 million Amerindians who lived in Spanish territory in the Americas. In Brazil the European emigration remained very small in the first two centuries of colonization: between 1500 and 1700, only 100,000 Portuguese settled there. However, the development of the mining economy in the 18th century raised the wages and employment opportunities in the Portuguese colony and the emigration grew: in the 18th century alone, about 600,000 Portuguese settled in Brazil, a mass emigration given that Portugal had a population of only 2 million people. In North America the immigration was dominated by British, Irish and other Northern Europeans.[36]

Post-independence emigration

Mass European emigration to the Americas happened in the 19th and 20th centuries. After the end of the Napoleonic Wars until 1920, some 60 million Europeans (and 10 million Asians) emigrated. Of these, 71% went to North America, 21% to Latin America (mainly Argentina and Brazil) and 7% to Australia. About 11 million of these people went to Latin America, of whom 38% were Italians, 28% were Spaniards and 11% were Portuguese.[37]

Between 1821 and 1880, 9.5 million Europeans settled in the United States, mainly Germans and Irish. Other waves included British and Scandinavian people. Despite the large number of immigrants arriving, people born outside of the United States formed a relatively small number of U.S. population: in 1910, foreigners were 14.7% of the country's population. Nothing similar to what happened in Argentina, which was the American country where immigrants had a larger impact in the ethnic composition. By 1914, 30% of Argentina's population was foreign-born, with 12% of its population born in Italy, the largest immigrant group. Next was Canada: by 1881, 14% of Canada's population was foreign-born, and the proportion increased to 22% in 1921. In Brazil the proportion of immigrants in the national population was much smaller, and immigrants tended to be concentrated in the central and Southern parts of the country. The proportion of foreigners in Brazil peaked in 1920, with just 7%, mostly Italians, Portuguese, and Spaniards.[36] In 1901–1920 immigration was responsible for only 7 percent of Brazilian population growth but in the years of high immigration, 1891–1900, the share was as high as 30 percent (higher than Argentina's 26% in the 1880s).[25]

Immigration arrivals in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries

DestinationYearsArrivalsReference
United States United States 1821–1932 32,244,000 [38]
Brazil Brazil 1821–1932 6,831,000 [38]
Argentina Argentina 1856–1932 6,405,000 [38]
Canada Canada 1821–1932 5,206,000 [38]
Australia Australia 1821–1932 2,913,000 [38]
Cuba Cuba 1901–1931 857,000 [38]
South Africa South Africa 1881–1932 852,000 [38]
Chile Chile 1882–1932 726,000* *Incomplete series[38]
Uruguay Uruguay 1836–1932 713,000 [38]
New Zealand New Zealand 1821–1932 594,000 [38]
Mexico Mexico 1911–1931 226,000 [38]

By populations

CountryPercentage of the local populationPopulation in
(thousands & millions)
YearRef
Uruguay Uruguay 90.7 2.8 2011 Census [18]
Australia Australia 90 20 2006 Census [39][40]
Argentina Argentina 85 to 97 34.6 to 38.9 (Estimates) Francisco Lizcano Fernandez and Ethnic Groups Worldwide: A Ready Reference Handbook, provide an estimate of 85% for people of Europeans origin in Argentina and The CIA World Factbook estimates. [5][41][42]
Canada Canada 76.7 25.1 2011 Census [4]
Puerto Rico Puerto Rico 75.8 3.1 2010 Census [43]
New Zealand New Zealand 74.0 2.9 2013 Census [44]
United States United States 72.4 223.5 2010 Census [1]
Cuba Cuba 64.1 7.2 2012 Census [12]
Costa Rica Costa Rica 40 1.7 or 3.8 2011 Latinobarometro survey, Lizcano [5][45]
Brazil Brazil 47.7 91.0 2010 Census [46]
Venezuela Venezuela 42.2 11.9 2011 Census [47]
Colombia Colombia 37.0 17 Library of Congress Country Studies
& Colombia a country study, 2010
[48][49][50]
Bermuda Bermuda 31.0 19,938 2010 Census [51]
Chile Chile 20 or 30 3.5 or 5.1 britannica.com & E.Medina-and-A.M.Kaempffer [14][15]
Paraguay Paraguay 20.0 1.3 Lizcano [5]
Nicaragua Nicaragua 17.0 1 CIA World Factbook [52]
Dominican Republic Dominican Republic 13.6 or 16 2.0 Fuente: Encuesta Latin American Public Opinion Project,
LAPOP, (2006 survey) & CIA World Factbook
[53][54]
Mexico Mexico 20 or 40 25.1 or 35.8 or 45 CIA World Factbook & Lizcano [5][6]
Bolivia Bolivia 15.0 2.0 CIA World Factbook [55]
El Salvador El Salvador 12.7 ?? 2007 Census [56]
South Africa South Africa 8.9 4.5 2011 Census [57]
Ecuador Ecuador 6.1 1.3 2010 Census [58]
Peru Peru 4.9 or 15 1.4 or 4.5 (2006 self-identification survey)
Instituto Nacional de Estadística e Informática
& Central Agency of Intelligence of the U.S.A
[19][59]

The number above refer to those who self-described as white in the census. Exclude those who self describe as mixed race with European descent such as mestizo and mulatto.

By region

Nations and regions outside of Europe with significant populations of European ancestry:[60]

Map of percentage of people with European ancestry, showing the European diaspora. (The map is based on data from this article: European diaspora, censuses and articles quoted in the file description.)

Africa

Main article: White African

About 0-1 percent of the populations in Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone, usually are in the professional business elites. Not limited to Europeans, the "white" population includes Arab peoples: Lebanese and Syrians.[66]

Asia

Further information: Western imperialism in Asia

Small communities of European, white American and white Australian expatriates live in East and Southeast Asia, such as China, Japan, South Korea, Thailand and Singapore.

Small communities of European, white American and white Australian expatriates in the Persian Gulf countries like Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and the UAE; and in Aramco compounds in Saudi Arabia. Historically before 1970, small ethnic European (esp. Greek and Italian) enclaves were found in Egypt (Greeks in Egypt, Italian Egyptians) and Syria (Greeks in Syria).

Americas

Total European population in the Americas—approximately 446,394,000

Europeans in Northern America

Europeans in Latin America and the Caribbean

The Virgin Islands divided between U.S. Virgin Islands and the British Virgin Islands, each have a small European minority.

Oceania

Main article: Europeans in Oceania

Contemporary European diasporas

Further information: List of diasporas

Potential emigrants

According to a 2010 Gallup study, an estimated 80 million adults in the European Union would prefer to emigrate if given free choice. About half of these would migrate to another country within the EU. The remaining 40 million have a desired destination outside of the EU, about 14 million would migrate to North America (USA or Canada), and 9 million to Australia or New Zealand.[123]

See also

References

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