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Revision as of 19:21, 25 May 2007 by Snowbound (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)A European is primarily a person who was born into one of the countries within the continent of Europe. Additionally, a person can also become a naturalized European by taking citizenship within a European country. A number of people, who were not born in Europe or hold citizenship there, identify themselves as European due to a strong sense of identification with their European ancestry, language and/or culture.
Identity and Culture
A number of nations outside of Europe were originally established as colonies of European countries. Many of those nations retain a dominant European population - that is a population whose ancestry, language and culture is largely derived from their European predecessors. European is particularly common as an ethnic descriptor for those populations. While generally established by particular European countries, the immigration policy of these colonies has often been very open and inclusive towards other European nations, and thus a "European" identity has been preferred by government and social institutions over narrower categories such as English, British or German.
Distribution
For a list of European nations, see Europe.
Nations with significant populations with European ancestry:
- United States of America (European American)
- Canada
- Argentina
- South Africa (Afrikaner)
- Zimbabwe
- Australia
- New Zealand (New Zealand European)