Jump to content

Demographics of Slovenia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Population of Slovenia)

Demographics of Slovenia
Population pyramid of Slovenia in 2020
Population2,101,208 (2022 est.)
Growth rateDecrease 0.06% (2022 est.)
Birth rate8.3 births/1,000 population
Death rate10.4 deaths/1,000 population
Life expectancy81.82 years
 • male78.96 years
 • female84.79 years
Fertility rate1.6 children
Infant mortality rate1.52 deaths/1,000 live births
Net migration rate1.54 migrant(s)/1,000 population
Sex ratio
Total1 male(s)/female (2022 est.)
At birth1.04 male(s)/female
Population density in Slovenia by municipality
Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1857 1,101,854—    
1869 1,128,768+0.20%
1880 1,182,223+0.42%
1890 1,234,056+0.43%
1900 1,268,055+0.27%
1910 1,321,098+0.41%
1921 1,304,800−0.11%
1931 1,397,650+0.69%
1948 1,439,800+0.17%
1953 1,504,427+0.88%
1961 1,591,523+0.71%
1971 1,727,137+0.82%
1981 1,891,864+0.92%
1991 1,913,355+0.11%
2002 1,964,036+0.24%
2011 2,050,189+0.48%
2021 2,108,977+0.28%
Source:[1]

Demographic features of the population of Slovenia include population density, ethnicity, education level, health of the populace, economic status, religious affiliations and other aspects of the population.

With 101 inhabitants per square kilometre (262/sq mi), Slovenia ranks low among the European countries in population density (compared to 402/km2 (1042/sq mi) for the Netherlands or 195/km2 (505/sq mi) for Italy). The Littoral–Inner Carniola Statistical Region has the lowest population density, and the Central Slovenia Statistical Region has the highest.[2]

According to the 2002 census, Slovenia's main ethnic group are Slovenes (83%). At least 13% of the population were immigrants from other parts of former Yugoslavia, primarily ethnic Bosniaks (Bosnian Muslims), Croats and Serbs and their descendants.[3] They have settled mainly in cities and suburbanised areas.[4] Relatively small but protected by the Constitution of Slovenia are the Hungarian and the Italian national community.[5][6][7] A special position is held by the geographically dispersed Roma ethnic community.[8][9]

Slovenia is among the European countries with the most pronounced ageing of population, ascribable to a low birth rate and increasing life expectancy.[10] Almost all Slovenian inhabitants older than 64 are retired, with no significant difference between the genders.[11] The working-age group is diminishing in spite of immigration.[12] The proposal to raise the retirement age from the current 57 for women and 58 for men was rejected in a referendum in 2011.[13] Also the difference among the genders regarding life expectancy is still significant.[11] In 2007, it was 74.6 years for men and 81.8 years for women.[14] In addition, in 2009, the suicide rate in Slovenia was 22 per 100,000 persons per year, which places Slovenia among the highest ranked European countries in this regard.[15]

Population

[edit]
Census date Population[1] Population density
(per km2)
1857 1,101,854 54.4
1869 1,128,768 55.7
1880 1,182,223 58.3
1890 1,234,056 60.9
1900 1,268,055 62.5
1910 1,321,098 65.2
1921 1,304,800 64.4
1931 1,397,650 68.9
1948 1,439,800 71.0
1953 1,504,427 74.2
1961 1,591,523 78.5
1971 1,727,137 85.2
1981 1,891,864 93.3
1991 1,913,355 94.4
2002 1,964,036 96.9
2011 2,050,189 101.1
2021 2,108,977 104.0

Vital statistics

[edit]

[16][17]

Source: Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia[18]

Mid-year population Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate (per 1000) Crude death rate (per 1000) Natural change (per 1000) Total fertility rate Female fertile population (15–49 years)
1950 1,466,881 35,992 17,335 18,657 24.5 11.8 12.7 3.12 389,726
1951 1,480,245 34,819 18,497 16,322 23.5 12.5 11.0 2.98 391,462
1952 1,493,550 34,165 15,617 18,548 22.9 10.5 12.4 2.91 393,199
1953 1,508,428 33,754 14,948 18,806 22.4 9.9 12.5 2.80 394,935
1954 1,521,485 31,828 14,897 16,931 20.9 9.8 11.1 2.58 395,721
1955 1,533,998 32,096 15,109 16,987 20.9 9.8 11.1 2.58 396,506
1956 1,545,591 31,466 16,351 15,115 20.4 10.6 9.8 2.51 397,292
1957 1,556,521 30,086 14,545 15,541 19.3 9.3 10.0 2.38 398,077
1958 1,566,979 28,284 14,082 14,202 18.1 9.0 9.1 2.22 398,863
1959 1,576,204 28,429 15,357 13,072 18.0 9.7 8.3 2.23 399,648
1960 1,580,145 27,825 15,145 12,680 17.6 9.6 8.0 2.18 400,434
1961 1,595,450 28,955 14,013 14,942 18.1 8.8 9.4 2.26 401,219
1962 1,604,980 29,035 15,866 13,169 18.1 9.9 8.2 2.27 406,216
1963 1,614,414 29,174 15,102 14,072 18.1 9.4 8.7 2.28 411,214
1964 1,630,553 29,184 16,729 12,455 17.9 10.3 7.6 2.32 416,211
1965 1,650,413 30,587 15,987 14,600 18.5 9.7 8.8 2.45 421,209
1966 1,669,606 30,941 15,248 15,693 18.5 9.1 9.4 2.48 426,206
1967 1,690,939 29,824 16,353 13,471 17.6 9.7 8.0 2.38 431,203
1968 1,703,708 28,580 17,446 11,134 16.8 10.2 6.5 2.28 436,201
1969 1,714,022 27,883 18,564 9,319 16.3 10.8 5.4 2.17 441,198
1970 1,726,513 27,432 17,354 10,078 15.9 10.1 5.8 2.21 446,196
1971 1,738,101 28,278 17,425 10,853 16.3 10.0 6.2 2.16 451,193
1972 1,751,506 28,713 18,153 10,560 16.4 10.4 6.0 2.14 453,763
1973 1,766,125 29,548 17,614 11,934 16.7 10.0 6.8 2.18 456,332
1974 1,782,470 28,625 17,206 11,419 16.1 9.7 6.4 2.10 458,902
1975 1,800,022 29,786 18,180 11,606 16.5 10.1 6.4 2.16 461,471
1976 1,819,276 30,339 18,157 12,182 16.7 10.0 6.7 2.17 464,041
1977 1,839,358 29,904 17,633 12,271 16.3 9.6 6.7 2.16 466,610
1978 1,862,620 30,354 18,357 11,997 16.3 9.9 6.4 2.19 469,180
1979 1,882,304 30,604 18,148 12,456 16.3 9.6 6.6 2.22 471,749
1980 1,901,208 29,902 18,820 11,082 15.7 9.9 5.8 2.11 474,319
1981 1,917,469 29,220 18,733 10,487 15.2 9.8 5.5 1.96 476,888
1982 1,924,877 28,894 19,647 9,247 15.0 10.2 4.8 1.93 480,333
1983 1,933,104 27,200 20,703 6,497 14.1 10.7 3.4 1.82 482,847
1984 1,942,802 26,274 20,214 6,060 13.5 10.4 3.1 1.75 484,847
1985 1,973,151 25,933 19,854 6,079 13.1 10.1 3.1 1.72 486,852
1986 1,980,718 25,570 19,499 6,071 12.9 9.8 3.1 1.65 489,508
1987 1,989,462 25,592 19,837 5,755 12.9 10.0 2.9 1.64 503,828
1988 1,999,988 25,209 19,126 6,083 12.6 9.6 3.0 1.63 506,828
1989 1,999,404 23,447 18,669 4,778 11.7 9.3 2.4 1.52 508,310
1990 1,998,090 22,368 18,555 3,813 11.2 9.3 1.9 1.46 509,166
1991 2,001,768 21,583 19,324 2,259 10.8 9.7 1.1 1.42 511,191
1992 1,995,832 19,982 19,333 649 10.0 9.7 0.3 1.34 512,506
1993 1,990,623 19,793 20,012 -219 9.9 10.1 -0.1 1.33 511,866
1994 1,988,850 19,463 19,359 104 9.8 9.7 0.1 1.32 511,534
1995 1,987,505 18,980 18,968 12 9.5 9.5 0.0 1.29 514,298
1996 1,991,169 18,788 18,620 168 9.4 9.4 0.1 1.28 516,690
1997 1,986,848 18,165 18,928 -763 9.1 9.5 -0.4 1.25 516,585
1998 1,982,603 17,856 19,039 -1,183 9.0 9.6 -0.6 1.23 516,296
1999 1,985,557 17,533 18,885 -1,352 8.8 9.5 -0.7 1.21 516,261
2000 1,990,272 18,180 18,588 -408 9.1 9.3 -0.2 1.26 515,258
2001 1,992,035 17,477 18,508 -1,031 8.8 9.3 -0.5 1.21 512,358
2002 1,995,718 17,501 18,701 -1,200 8.8 9.4 -0.6 1.21 510,692
2003 1,996,773 17,321 19,451 -2,130 8.7 9.7 -1.1 1.20 507,713
2004 1,997,004 17,961 18,523 -562 9.0 9.3 -0.3 1.25 504,530
2005 2,001,114 18,157 18,825 -668 9.1 9.4 -0.3 1.26 500,449
2006 2,008,516 18,932 18,180 752 9.4 9.1 0.4 1.31 496,853
2007 2,019,406 19,823 18,584 1,239 9.8 9.2 0.6 1.31 491,536
2008 2,022,629 21,817 18,308 3,509 10.8 9.1 1.7 1.53 486,506
2009 2,042,335 21,856 18,750 3,106 10.7 9.2 1.5 1.53 483,681
2010 2,049,261 22,343 18,609 3,734 10.9 9.1 1.8 1.57 479,815
2011 2,052,496 21,947 18,699 3,248 10.7 9.1 1.6 1.56 474,646
2012 2,056,262 21,938 19,257 2,681 10.7 9.4 1.3 1.58 469,442
2013 2,059,114 21,111 19,334 1,777 10.3 9.4 0.9 1.55 463,138
2014 2,061,623 21,165 18,886 2,279 10.3 9.2 1.1 1.58 456,811
2015 2,063,077 20,641 19,834 807 10.0 9.6 0.4 1.57 450,224
2016 2,064,241 20,345 19,689 656 9.9 9.5 0.3 1.58 443,390
2017 2,066,161 20,241 20,509 -268 9.8 9.9 -0.1 1.62 436,478
2018[19] 2,070,050 19,585 20,485 -900 9.5 9.9 -0.4 1.61 430,225
2019[20][21] 2,089,310 19,328 20,588 -1,260 9.3 9.9 -0.6 1.61 428,255
2020[22][23] 2,100,126 18,767 24,016 -5,249 8.9 11.4 -2.5 1.60 426,155
2021[24][25] 2,107,007 18,984 23,261 -4,277 9.0 11.0 -2.0 1.64 425,310
2022 2,108,732 17,627 22,492 -4,865 8.4 10.7 -2.3 1.55 423,301
2023 2,120,937 16,989 21,540 -4,551 8.0 10.2 -2.1 1.51 423,982

Current vital statistics

[edit]

[26][27][28]

Period Live births Deaths Natural increase
January - October 2023 14,279 17,574 −3,295
January - October 2024 13,958 17,710 −3,752
Difference Decrease -321 (-2.24%) Negative increase +136 (+0.77%) Decrease -457

Structure of the population

[edit]
Population by Sex and Age Group (Census 01.I.2021) (Fully register based census.): [29]
Age Group Male Female Total %
Total 1 059 938 1 049 039 2 108 977 100
0–4 51 230 48 119 99 349 4.71
5–9 56 155 52 767 108 922 5.16
10–14 56 285 53 175 109 460 5.19
15–19 48 450 45 497 93 947 4.45
20–24 55 500 48 158 103 658 4.92
25–29 60 660 52 345 113 005 5.36
30–34 71 309 62 333 133 642 6.34
35–39 79 855 70 219 150 074 7.12
40–44 85 952 75 862 161 814 7.67
45–49 80 250 72 516 152 766 7.24
50–54 76 913 72 888 149 801 7.10
55–59 76 799 75 553 152 352 7.22
60–64 71 998 72 474 144 472 6.85
65-69 66 495 70 032 136 527 6.47
70-74 50 200 57 623 107 823 5.11
75-79 32 465 43 273 75 738 3.59
80-84 23 621 37 431 61 052 2.89
85-89 11 656 24 986 36 642 1.74
90-94 3 569 11 129 14 698 0.70
95-99 525 2 429 2 954 0.14
100+ 51 230 281 0.01
Age group Male Female Total Percent
0–14 163 670 154 061 317 731 15.07
15–64 707 686 647 845 1 355 531 64.27
65+ 188 582 247 133 435 715 20.66

Life expectancy at birth

[edit]
Life expectancy in Slovenia since 1950
Life expectancy in Slovenia since 1960 by gender
Period Life expectancy in

Years[30]

1950–1955 65.60
1955–1960 Increase 67.88
1960–1965 Increase 69.15
1965–1970 Increase 69.17
1970–1975 Increase 69.81
1975–1980 Increase 70.97
1980–1985 Increase 71.21
1985–1990 Increase 72.69
1990–1995 Increase 73.74
1995–2000 Increase 75.26
2000–2005 Increase 76.66
2005–2010 Increase 78.55
2010–2015 Increase 80.31

Marriages and divorces

[edit]

Immigration

[edit]
Largest groups of foreign residents[32]
Rank Nationality Population (2023)
1  Bosnia and Herzegovina 87,446
2  Kosovo 27,013
3  Serbia 17,652
4  North Macedonia 14,863
5 European Union Croatia 9,819
6  Ukraine 8,524
7  Russia 4,172
8 European Union Bulgaria 3,135
9 European Union Italy 2,695
10  China 1,285
11 European Union Germany 1,051
12  Montenegro 1,029
13  United Kingdom 713
14  Turkey 670
15 European Union Hungary 656
16 European Union Austria 506
17 European Union Romania 476
18 European Union Slovakia 468
19  United States 468
20  Thailand 369

Net Migration

[edit]
Slovenia International Migration Statistics (1961-present)
Year Immigrants from Abroad Emigrants to Abroad Net Migration from Abroad
1961 6,537 5,707 830
1962 7,373 5,357 2,016
1963 8,850 6,056 2,794
1964 9,364 5,999 3,365
1965 10,513 6,250 4,263
1966 9,457 5,046 4,411
1967 9,272 5,686 3,586
1968 7,051 6,112 939
1969 7,834 6,705 1,129
1970 7,168 5,665 1,503
1971 7,442 4,913 2,529
1972 7,832 4,475 3,357
1973 8,271 4,956 3,315
1974 9,646 5,281 4,365
1975 11,325 4,479 6,846
1976 12,682 4,570 8,112
1977 13,132 5,113 8,019
1978 12,770 5,432 7,338
1979 13,877 5,780 8,097
1980 11,983 6,710 5,273
1981 11,482 7,220 4,262
1982 10,644 6,207 4,437
1983 9,781 5,977 3,804
1984 9,224 5,910 3,314
1985 8,912 5,386 3,526
1986 9,194 5,294 3,900
1987 8,580 4,124 4,456
1988 7,782 4,089 3,693
1989 7,151 4,730 2,421
1990 7,075 4,908 2,167
1991 5,989 9,060 -3,071
1992 3,461 3,848 -387
1993 2,745 1,390 1,355
1994 1,919 983 936
1995 5,879 3,372 2,507
1996 9,495 2,985 6,510
1997 7,889 5,447 2,442
1998 4,603 6,708 -2,105
1999 4,941 2,606 2,335
2000 6,185 3,570 2,615
2001 7,803 4,811 2,992
2002 9,134 7,269 1,865
2003 9,279 5,867 3,412
2004 10,171 8,269 1,902
2005 15,041 8,605 6,436
2006 20,016 13,749 6,267
2007 29,193 14,943 14,250
2008 30,693 12,109 18,584
2009 30,296 18,788 11,508
2010 15,416 15,937 -521
2011 14,083 12,024 2,059
2012 15,022 14,378 644
2013 13,871 13,384 487
2014 13,846 14,336 -490
2015 15,420 14,913 507
2016 16,623 15,572 1,051
2017 18,808 17,555 1,253
2018 28,455 13,527 14,928
2019 31,319 15,106 16,213
2020 36,110 17,745 18,365
2021 23,624 21,144 2,480
2022 35,613 20,956 14,657

[33]

Ethnic groups

[edit]

The majority of Slovenia's population are ethnic Slovenes (83.06%). Hungarians and Istrian Italians have the status of indigenous minorities under the Constitution of Slovenia, which guarantees them seats in the National Assembly. Most other minority groups, particularly those from other parts of the former Yugoslavia (except for one part of autochthonous community of Serbs and Croats), relocated after World War II for economic reasons.

Around 12.4% of the inhabitants of Slovenia were born abroad.[34] According to data from 2008, there were around 100,000 non-EU citizens living in Slovenia, or around 5% of the overall population of the country.[35] The highest number came from Bosnia and Herzegovina, followed by immigrants from Serbia, North Macedonia, Croatia (which has since joined the EU itself) and Kosovo. In April 2019, there were 143,192 foreign citizens living in Slovenia, representing 6.87% of Slovenia's population.[36] The number of people migrating to Slovenia has been steadily rising from 1995;[37] and the rate of immigration itself has been increasing year-on-year, reaching its peak in 2016. Since Slovenia joined the EU in 2004, the yearly inflow of immigrants has doubled by 2006 and tripled by 2009.[38] In 2007, Slovenia was one of the countries with the fastest growth of net migration rate in the European Union.[37]

Population of Slovenia by ethnic group, 1948–20021
Ethnic
group
1948 census 1953 census 1961 census 1971 census 1981 census 1991 census 2002 census
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
Slovenes 1,350,149 97.0 1,415,448 96.5 1,522,248 95.6 1,578,963 94.0 1,668,623 90.8 1,689,657 88.3 1,631,363 83.1
Serbs 7,048 0.5 11,225 0.8 13,609 0.9 20,209 1.2 41,695 2.3 47,401 2.5 38,964 2.0
Croats 16,069 1.2 17,978 1.2 31,429 2.0 41,556 2.5 53,882 2.9 52,876 2.8 35,642 1.8
Ethnic Muslims 179 0.0 1,617 0.1 465 0.0 3,197 0.2 13,339 0.7 26,577 1.4 10,467 0.5
Bosniaks 21,542 1.1
Hungarians 10,579 0.8 11,019 0.8 10,498 0.7 8,943 0.5 8,777 0.5 8,000 0.4 6,243 0.3
Albanians 216 0.0 169 0.0 282 0.0 1,266 0.1 1,933 0.1 3,534 0.2 6,186 0.3
Macedonians 366 0.0 640 0.0 1,009 0.1 1,572 0.1 3,227 0.2 4,371 0.2 3,972 0.2
Romani 46 0.0 1,663 0.1 158 0.0 951 0.1 1,393 0.1 2,259 0.1 3,246 0.2
Montenegrins 521 0.0 1,356 0.1 1,384 0.1 1,950 0.1 3,175 0.2 4,339 0.2 2,667 0.1
Italians 1,458 0.1 854 0.1 3,072 0.2 2,987 0.2 2,138 0.1 2,959 0.2 2,258 0.1
Others/undeclared 5,242 0.4 4,456 0.3 7,369 0.5 19,212 1.1 40,199 2.2 79,374 4.1 201,486 10.3
Total 1,391,873 1,466,425 1,591,523 1,679,051 1,838,381 1,913,355 1,964,036
1 Source: [1] Archived 6 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine.

Religion

[edit]

Traditionally, Slovenes are predominantly Roman Catholic. Before World War II, 97% of Slovenes declared as Roman Catholics, around 2.5% were Lutheran, and only around 0.5% belonged to other denominations. Catholicism was an important feature of both social and political life in pre-communist Slovenia. After 1945, the country underwent a process of gradual but steady secularization. After a decade of severe persecution of religions, the communist regime adopted a policy of relative tolerance towards the churches, but limited their social functioning. After 1990, the Roman Catholic Church regained some of its former influence, but Slovenia remains a largely secularized society. According to the 2002 census, 57.8% of the population is Roman Catholic. As elsewhere in Europe, affiliation with Roman Catholicism is dropping: in 1991, 71.6% were self-declared Catholics, which means a drop of more than 1% annually.[39] The vast majority of Slovenian Catholics belong to the Latin Church. A small number of Eastern Catholics live in the White Carniola region.[40]

Despite a relatively small number of Protestants (less than 1% in 2002), the Protestant legacy is important because of its historical significance, since the bases of Slovene standard language and Slovene literature were established by the Protestant Reformation in the 16th century. Nowadays, a significant Lutheran minority lives in the easternmost region of Prekmurje, where they represent around a fifth of the population and are headed by a bishop with the seat in Murska Sobota.[41]

Besides these two Christian denominations, a small Jewish community has also been historically present. Despite the losses suffered during the Holocaust, Judaism still numbers a few hundred adherents, mostly living in Ljubljana, site of the sole remaining active synagogue in the country.[42]

According to the 2002 census, Islam is the second largest religious denomination with around 2.4% of the population. Most Slovenian Muslims came from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, and North Macedonia.[43] The third largest denomination, with around 2.2% of the population, is Orthodox Christianity, with most adherents belonging to the Serbian Orthodox Church, whereas a minority belong to the Macedonian Orthodox Church and other Orthodox churches.

In the 2002, around 10% of Slovenes declared themselves as atheists, another 10% professed no specific denomination, and around 16% decided not to answer the question about their religious affiliation. According to the Eurobarometer Poll 2005,[44] 37% of Slovenian citizens responded that "they believe there is a god", whereas 46% answered that "they believe there is some sort of spirit or life force" and 16% that "they do not believe there is any sort of spirit, god, or life force".

The distribution of the residents of Slovenia by religion is the following: Roman Catholic 57.8%, atheist 10.1%, Muslim 2.4%, Orthodox Christian 2.3%, Protestant 0.9%, other and unknown 26.5% (2002).

According to the published data from the 2002 Slovenian census, out of a total of 47,488 Muslims (2.4% of the total population) 2,804 Muslims (5.90% of the total Muslims in Slovenia) declared themselves as ethnic Slovenian Muslims.[45]

Language

[edit]

The official language in Slovenia is Slovene, which is a member of the South Slavic language group. In 2002, Slovene was the native language of around 88% of Slovenia's population according to the census, with more than 92% of the Slovenian population speaking it in their home environment.[46][47] This places Slovenia among the most homogeneous countries in the EU in terms of the share of speakers of predominant mother tongue.[48] Slovene is sometimes characterized as the most diverse Slavic language in terms of dialects,[49] with different degrees of mutual intelligibility.[citation needed] Accounts of the number of dialects range from as few as seven[50][51][52] dialects, often considered dialect groups or dialect bases that are further subdivided into as many as 50 dialects.[53] Other sources characterize the number of dialects as nine[54] or eight.[55]

The distribution of speakers by language is the following: Slovene 87.7%, Serbo-Croatian 8%, Hungarian 0.4%, Albanian 0.4%, Macedonian 0.2%, Romani 0.2%, Italian 0.2%, German 0.1%, other 0.1% (Russian, Czech, Ukrainian, English, Slovak, Polish, Romanian, Turkish, French, Bulgarian, Arabic, Spanish, Dutch, "Vlach", Rusyn, Greek, Swedish, Danish or Armenian), unknown 2.7% (2002)

CIA World Factbook demographic statistics

[edit]

The following demographic statistics are from the CIA World Factbook, unless otherwise indicated.

Population

[edit]

2,102,678 (July 2020 est.)

Age structure

[edit]


0–14 years: 13.4% (male 138,604/female 130,337)
15–64 years: 69.8% (male 703,374/female 692,640)
65 years and over: 16.8% (male 132,096/female 203,068) (2011 est.)

Median age

[edit]
total: 42.8 years
male: 41.1 years
female: 44.5 years (2012 est.)

Urbanization

[edit]
urban population: 50% of total population (2012 est.)
rate of urbanization: 0.2% annual rate of change (2010-2015 est.)

Sex ratio

[edit]


at birth: 1.07 male(s)/female
under 15 years: 1.06 male(s)/female
15–64 years: 1.01 male(s)/female
65 years and over: 0.66 male(s)/female
total population: 0.95 male(s)/female (2011 est.)

Infant mortality rate

[edit]

4.12 deaths/1,000 live births (2010)

Life expectancy at birth

[edit]


total population: 80 years
male: 77 years
female: 83 years (2013 est)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Population and household censuses". SiStat Database. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  2. ^ "Napaka 404". www.stat.si. Archived from the original on 26 August 2013. Retrieved 24 April 2012.
  3. ^ Medvešek, Mojca (2007). "Kdo so priseljenci z območja nekdanje Jugoslavije" [Who Are the Immigrants from the Area of Former Yugoslavia] (PDF). Razprave in Gradivo (in Slovenian). No. 53–54. Institute for Ethnic Studies. p. 34.
  4. ^ Repolusk, Peter (2006). "Narodnostno neopredeljeno prebivalstvo ob popisih 1991 in 2002 v Sloveniji" [Ethnically Undeclared Population in Slovenian Population Censuses 1991 and 2002] (PDF). Dela (in Slovenian and English). Vol. 25. Anton Melik Geographical Institute. pp. 87–96. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 March 2012.
  5. ^ "International Mother Language Day 2010". Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia. 19 February 2010. Archived from the original on 25 December 2018. Retrieved 29 January 2011.
  6. ^ "Constitution of the Republic of Slovenia". National Assembly of the Republic of Slovenia. Archived from the original on 23 December 2010. Retrieved 26 January 2011.
  7. ^ Šabec, Ksenija (2009). Poročilo: Italijanska narodna skupnost v Slovenski Istri [Report: The Italian National Community in the Slovenian Istria] (PDF) (in Slovenian). Center for Cultural and Religious Studies, University of Ljubljana. p. 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 1 February 2011.
  8. ^ Gajšek, Nina (2004). Pravice romske skupnosti v Republiki Sloveniji [Rights of the Roma Community in the Republic of Slovenia] (PDF) (in Slovenian). Faculty of Social Science, University of Ljubljana.
  9. ^ Zupančič, Jernej (2007). "Romska naselja kot poseben del naselbinskega sistema v Sloveniji" [Roma Settlements as a Specific Part of Settlement System in Slovenia] (PDF). Dela (in Slovenian and English). Vol. 27. Institute of Geography. pp. 215–246. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 March 2012.
  10. ^ Zupanič, Milena (20 June 2011). "Demografski preobrat: tiha revolucija med nami" [The Demographic Overturn: The Silent Revolution Among Us]. Delo.si (in Slovenian). Delo, d. d. ISSN 1854-6544.
  11. ^ a b Hlebec, Valentina; Šircelj, Milivoja (September 2011). "Population Ageing in Slovenia and Social Support Networks of Older People". In Hoff, Andreas (ed.). Population Ageing in Central and Eastern Europe: Societal and Policy Implications. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. 118–119. ISBN 978-0-7546-7828-1.
  12. ^ "Strong Growth but an Ageing Workforce". Slovenia. OECD Publishing. July 2009. p. 34. ISBN 978-92-64-06894-0.
  13. ^ Naidu-Ghelani, Rajeshni (23 January 2012). "Countries with Aging Populations". CNBC. Archived from the original on 23 February 2013.
  14. ^ Complete life table for the population of Slovenia, 2007 Archived 2 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia, 2009.
  15. ^ "World Suicide Prevention Day 2010". Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia. September 2010. Archived from the original on 13 November 2010. Retrieved 24 April 2012.
  16. ^ "Podatkovna baza SiStat". pxweb.stat.si.
  17. ^ "Database - Eurostat". ec.europa.eu.
  18. ^ "SURS". www.stat.si. Archived from the original on 29 June 2019. Retrieved 31 July 2019.
  19. ^ "Demographic events, Slovenia, 2018". www.stat.si.
  20. ^ "Births, Slovenia, 2019". www.stat.si.
  21. ^ "Deaths, Slovenia, 2019". www.stat.si.
  22. ^ "Births, Slovenia, 2020". www.stat.si.
  23. ^ "Deaths, Slovenia, 2020". www.stat.si.
  24. ^ "Births, 2021". www.stat.si.
  25. ^ "Deaths, 2021". www.stat.si.
  26. ^ "Live births by MONTH and DAY OF THE MONTH". PX-Web.
  27. ^ "Umrli by MONTH and DAY OF THE MONTH". PX-Web.
  28. ^ "Release calendar".
  29. ^ "UNSD — Demographic and Social Statistics". unstats.un.org. Retrieved 10 May 2023.
  30. ^ "World Population Prospects - Population Division - United Nations". esa.un.org. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  31. ^ "Marriages and divorces, Slovenia, 2019". www.stat.si.
  32. ^ "Podatkovna baza SiStat".
  33. ^ "Statistics Slovenia". Statistics Slovenia. Retrieved 14 June 2024.
  34. ^ Vsak osmi prebivalec Slovenije priseljenec :: Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal, MMC RTV Slovenija. Rtvslo.si. Retrieved on 26 December 2010.
  35. ^ Odgovor na pisno poslansko vprašanje v zvezi z nastanitvijo tujcev v Sloveniji – Računovodja.com. Racunovodja.com. Retrieved on 26 December 2010.
  36. ^ "Non-Slovenes Now Represent 6.9% of Slovenia's Population".
  37. ^ a b Statistični urad RS – Selitveno gibanje, Slovenija, 2007 Archived 6 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Stat.si. Retrieved on 26 December 2010.
  38. ^ http://arquivo.pt/wayback/20160515211029/http://www.stat.si/pxweb/Database/Dem_soc/05_prebivalstvo/20_selitve/01_05563_meddrzavne_selitve/01_05563_meddrzavne_selitve.asp. Archived from the original on 15 May 2016. Retrieved 24 April 2012. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  39. ^ Source: Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia, Census of Population, Households and Housing, 2002
  40. ^ Uskoška dediščina Bele krajine na RTVS|Ljudje|Lokalno aktualno. Lokalno.si. Retrieved on 26 December 2010.
  41. ^ Predstavitev Archived 10 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Evang-cerkev.si. Retrieved on 26 December 2010.
  42. ^ "Slovenia Virtual Jewish History Tour". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org.
  43. ^ "Islamska skupnost v Republiki Sloveniji". www.islamska-skupnost.si.
  44. ^ "Eurobarometer on Social Values, Science and technology 2005 – page 11" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 May 2006. Retrieved 5 May 2007.
  45. ^ "Population by religion and ethnic affiliation, Slovenia, 2002 Census". Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia. Archived from the original on 26 September 2017. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
  46. ^ Slovenščina materni jezik za 88 odstotkov državljanov Archived 16 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine. SiOL.net (19 February 2009). Retrieved on 26 December 2010.
  47. ^ verska, jezikovna in narodna sestava.pmd Archived 13 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine. (PDF) . Retrieved on 26 December 2010.
  48. ^ "Linguist Says Slovenian Language Not Endangered". Slovenian Press Agency. 21 February 2010.
  49. ^ "International Mother Language Day". Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia. 19 February 2009. Archived from the original on 13 November 2010. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
  50. ^ McDonald, Gordon C. 1979. Yugoslavia: A Country Study. Washington, DC: American University, p. 93
  51. ^ Greenberg, Marc L. 2009. "Slovene." In Keith Brown & Sarah Ogilvie (eds.), Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World, pp. 981–984. Oxford: Elsevier, p. 981.
  52. ^ Brown, E. K. & Anne Anderson. 2006. Encyclopedia of Language & Linguistics: Sca-Spe. Oxford: Elsevier, p. 424
  53. ^ Sussex, Roland, & Paul V. Cubberley. 2006. The Slavic languages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 502.
  54. ^ Sławski, Franciszek. 1962. Zarys dialektologii południowosłowiańskiej. Warsaw: PAN.
  55. ^ Priestly, Tom M. S. 1993. "On 'Drift' in Indo-European Gender Systems.' Journal of Indo-European Studies 11: 339–363.
[edit]