Swiss migration to France
Swiss migration to France has resulted in France being home to one of the largest Swiss-born populations outside Switzerland. Migration from the Switzerland to France has increased rapidly from the 1980s onward and by 2013 there were an estimated 194,500[2] Swiss citizens living in France.[3] Besides Paris, the Swiss living in France have formed communities in southern France, Brittany, and Corsica.
Total population | |
---|---|
est. 200,730 (2017)[1][2] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Île-de-France, Aquitaine, Languedoc-Roussillon, Midi-Pyrénées, Brittany, Poitou-Charentes, Corsica, Centre-Val de Loire | |
Languages | |
German, French, Italian, Romansh | |
Religion | |
Swiss Reformed Church, Orthodox and Catholicism, | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Swiss |
Notable people
gollark: You want it to be handled by the legal system.
gollark: Or anything else.
gollark: And as I said, the people involved in legal stuff are generally better at... legal things... than the actual technical stuff involved in programming.
gollark: For example, using some sort of standard-body-certified thing so you can blame someone else if it fails, instead of a safer thing which isn't.
gollark: The legal system being involved also often encourages overcaution in ways which are more "cover your a[REDACTED]" than "actually make stuff safer".
See also
References
- https://www.diplomatie.gouv.fr/fr/dossiers-pays/suisse/presentation-de-la-suisse/
- statistique, Office fédéral de la. "Population". Bfs.admin.ch. Retrieved 28 August 2017.
- "Présentation du Royaume-Uni". Diplomatie.gouv.fr. Retrieved 28 August 2017.
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