|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Demographics of Algeria, Data of FAO, year 2005 ; Number of inhabitants in thousands.
Ninety-one percent of the Algerian population lives along the Mediterranean coast on 12% of the country's total land mass. Forty-five percent of the population is urban, and urbanization continues, despite government efforts to discourage migration to the cities. Currently, 14,182,736 Algerians live in urban areas while 14,990,959 live in rural areas. About 1.5 million nomads and semi-settled Bedouin still live in the Saharan area. According to the CIA World Factbook, an estimated 29.9% of the population is under age 15. 97% of the population is classified ethnically as Berber/Arab and religiously as Sunni Muslim 98.5% , the few non-Sunni Muslims are mainly Ibadis 1.3% from the M'Zab valley. (See also Islam in Algeria.) A mostly foreign Roman Catholic community also about christians especially Protestant evangelic and almost 50 to 100 Jewish. The Jewish community of Algeria, which once constituted 2% of the total population, has substantially decreased due to emigration, mostly to France and Israel. Algeria's educational system has grown rapidly since 1962; in the last 12 years, attendance has doubled to more than 5 million students. Education is free and compulsory to age 16. Despite government allocation of substantial educational resources, population pressures and a serious shortage of teachers have severely strained the system, as have terrorist attacks against the educational infrastructure during the 1990s. Modest numbers of Algerian students study abroad, primarily in Europe and Canada. In 2000, the government launched a major review of the country's educational system. Housing and medicine continue to be pressing problems in Algeria. Failing infrastructure and the continued influx of people from rural to urban areas has overtaxed both systems. According to the UNDP, Algeria has one of the world's highest per housing unit occupancy rates for housing, and government officials have publicly stated that the country has an immediate shortfall of 1.5 million housing units. Demographic statistics from the CIA World Factbook
Population pyramid for Algeria
The following demographic statistics are from the CIA World Factbook. Population
Age structure
Population growth rate
Birth rate
Death rate
Net migration rate
Sex ratio
Infant mortality rate
Life expectancy at birth
Total fertility rate
Nationality
HIV/AIDS
Major infectious diseases
Ethnic groups
GeneticIn a very recent study (2008) done in northwestern Algeria (Oran area)1, the most common haplogroups observed in the Algerian population (n=102) were :
In a recent genetic study by Semino et al. (2004), Arabs and Berbers were found to have more genetic similarities than was once believed2. The genes that are found highly in both Arabs and Berbers are E-M35, Hg J, and J-M267 (found in 70% of Middle Eastern people and 90% in North Africa). This led scientists to conclude that North Africa has more Arab genes than was previously hypothesized. Southern Algerians are most genetically closely linked with Arabs from Gulf countries, such as Saudi Arabia, Yemen and the UAE. Northern Algerians are most genetically linked with Arabs from Lebanon, Palestine, Syria and Jordan and some Gulf countries. A thorough study by Arredi et al. (2004) which analyzed populations from Algeria concludes that the North African pattern of Y-chromosomal variation (including both E1b1b and J haplogroups) is largely of Neolithic origin, which suggests that the Neolithic transition in this part of the world was accompanied by demic diffusion of Afro-Asiatic–speaking pastoralists from the Middle East. This Neolithic origin was later confirmed by Myles et al. (2005) which suggest that "contemporary Berber populations possess the genetic signature of a past migration of pastoralists from the Middle East". 3 Religions
LanguagesLiteracyDefinition: Age 15 and over can read and write
References
This article contains material from the CIA World Factbook (2006 edition) which, as a US government publication, is in the public domain. and the As of 2003[update] U.S. Department of State website. |
| All Right Reserved © 2007, Designed by Stylish Blog. |