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  1. Statistical analysis, 2017 Displaced persons from Bosnia and Herzegovina arriving in Norway in the 1990s Bosnians

  2. Students (aged 19–24) in higher education, as a percentage of registered cohort for year. Men and women, by immigrant category. 1 October 2015. Per cent Men Women Total 28 42 Students without an imm

  3. Marriages contracted among persons with an immigrant background from Bosnia and Herzegovina. 2010–2015 Total, number Immigrant background of spouse, per cent Non-immigrant Immigrant background Not

  4. Unemployed immigrants and participants on employment initiatives (aged 15–74). Men and women, by country background. 2nd quarter 2016. Per cent Total Men Women Population as a whole 2.5 2.9 2.1 Immi

  5. Employed persons (aged 15–74) as a percentage of registered cohort for year. Men and women, by country background. 4th quarter 2015 Total Men Women Population as a whole 66.1 68.2 63.9 Population wi

  6. Bokmål, Norwegian Nynorsk, Albanian, Amharic, Arabic, Bosnian, Burmese, Dari, English, French, Chinese (Mandarin

  7. : Bosnians, Kosovars and Syrians. Using register data, we examine the composition and remigration in the groups

  8. completed education, which is above average for refugees in general, while the corresponding figure for Bosnians is 20 per cent. Written by

  9. , Baluchi, Bambara, Bemba, Bengali, Berber, Bosnian, Bulgarian, Burmese, Chichewa, Danish, Dari, Divehi, Dzhongkha, English

  10. . Iraq also has a significant proportion of family immigrants, with 36 per cent. The lowest share of family immigrants was for Bosnians, with just 10 per cent

  11. . This was a change from 1999, while the number was higher in 1995-97. The largest single groups to receive Norwegian citizenship in 2000 were former Yugoslavians, Bosnians and Pakistanis

  12. labour market statistics suggest that the employment level among today’s newly arrived Syrians is roughly equivalent to the level of the Bosnians after the

  13. : Bosnians who fled the Balkan wars in the 1990s, and Iraqis who have been arriving in smaller groups since the 1990s. Written by: Lars

  14. . Bosnians were still the largest refugee group. Read more: Population statistics. Refugees, 1 January 2002 Figures from the Norwegian Directorate of Immigration show that a total of 8,800 persons were granted protection in 2002

  15. . A similar decline among the women in our study is difficult to find, with the possible exception of Bosnian and Turkish women.