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Population density (people per km 2) by country. This is a list of countries and dependencies ranked by population density, sorted by inhabitants per square kilometre or square mile. The list includes sovereign states and self-governing dependent territories based upon the ISO standard ISO 3166-1.
This is a list of countries and territories in Europe by population density. Data are from the United Nations unless otherwise specified. [1] [2] Abkhazia, Georgia and South Ossetia are each bordered on the north by the Greater Caucasus, and may have some territory north of these mountains and thus in Europe by the most common definition.
English: Population per square Kilometer. Source: Data table compiled byUnited Nations ESA (2017) This is a derivative work on BlankMap-World6.svg available on Wikimedia commons. This SVG file has been tested with W3C, and it passed "This document was successfully checked as SVG 1.1 + XHTML + MathML 3.0!".
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 14:18, 25 November 2018: 864 × 443 (1.37 MB): Lamensi: Reverted to version as of 17:47, 21 October 2018 (UTC) 16:17, 29 October 2018
English: Population density of countries 2018 world map, people per sq km. Date: 26 August 2020: Source: Own work: Author: Giorgi Balakhadze:
Citing that Singapore's 900,000 Baby Boomers would comprise a quarter of the citizen population by 2030 and that its workforce would shrink "from 2020 onwards", the White Paper projected that by 2030, Singapore's "total population could range between 6.5 and 6.9 million", with resident population between 4.2 and 4.4 million and citizen ...
Singapore's population grew 5% in a year as foreign workers returned to the city-state following the pandemic, data released on Friday showed. There were 5.9 million people in Singapore as of June ...
This is a list of countries showing past and future population density, ranging from 1950 to 2300, as estimated by the 2017 revision of the World Population Prospects database by the United Nations Population Division. The population density equals the number of human inhabitants per square kilometer of land area.