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According to Statistics Denmark, in 2008 7% of all employed persons in Denmark were immigrants, and an additional one percent were descendants of immigrants. In 2021, immigrants made out 12% of total employment, and their descendants a further 2.5%, so that the percentage of people of Danish origin had dwindled to 85.5% of total employment.
Diplomatic missions of the Kingdom of Denmark. When in a non-EU country where there is no Danish embassy, Danish citizens as EU citizens have the right to get consular protection from the embassy of any other EU country present in that country. Note that the Faroe Islands belong to the Kingdom of Denmark, but not to the EU.
The Danish Immigration Service (Danish: Udlændingestyrelsen or Udlændingeservice) is a directorate within the Danish Ministry of Refugees, Immigration and Integration Affairs.
The proposal was presented along with another proposal, COM(2007)638, which includes a simplified application procedure and a common set of rights for legal third-country workers. The name 'blue card' is chosen to signal potential immigrants that the blue card is the European alternative to the US green card. The colour blue is the predominant ...
The rule is supported by all major political parties in Denmark except Enhedslisten. [4] Some Danish politicians have advocated increasing it to 28 years of age. [5] [6] Also advocated by the Progress Party in neighbouring country Norway, centre-right parties agreed to implement the rule there in 2014. [7] [8]
Denmark, Ireland and Switzerland do not issue national identity cards compliant to the EU Regulation 2019/1157, for different reasons outlined below. Danish identity cards are issued by municipalities, each having their own design, and are not accepted as valid travel documents outside Denmark.
Denmark: DKK 350 per day Estonia: €130.80 per day Finland: €30 per day [232] France: €120 per day if holding no proof of accommodation; €65 per day if staying at a hotel; €32.50 per day if holding proof of accommodation. [233] Germany: €45 per day in the form of cash, credit cards and cheques but alternatively a letter of guarantee ...
The Identity Cards Act 2006 provided for the introduction of British ID cards which were to be linked to a system of resident registration which would also contain any information deemed necessary by the government; however, following the 2010 General Election this scheme was abolished by the Identity Documents Act 2010.