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APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2009/06/16: CIA-RDP01-00707R000200090021-3


FIGURE 3. Area, population, and population density by province (Lan), 1969
Province Area (Square Miles) Population Persons Per Square Mile
Stockholm (city)[1] 72
Stockholm 2,866 1,459,814 489.5
Uppsala 2,820 201,882 98.4
Sodermanland 2,432 247,703 103.6
Ostergotland 3,868 375,947 95.8
Jonkoping 4,073 305,045 75.1
Kronoberg 3,452 166,105 51.8
Kalmar 4,268 242,150 54.3
Gotland 1,208 54,093 44.0
Blekinge 1,119 152,702 134.7
Kristianstad 2,368 265,772 111.3
Malmobus 1,823 707,828 383.3
Halland 1,828 194,266 106.1
Goteborg och Bohus 1,906 699,395 352.2
Alvsborg 4,504 400,995 90.6
Skarsborg 3,104 255,964 85.4
Varmland 6,733 284,930 41.4
Ombro 3,210 275,243 82.8
Vastmanland 2,470 260,869 103.6
Kopparberg 10,904 270,138 25.9
Gavleborg 6,996 293,377 41.4
Vasternorrland 9,278 274,104 28.4
Jamtland 18,272 126,158 7.7
Vasterbotten 21,306 233,971 10.8
Norrbotten 38,042 236,750 7.7
Total 158,136 8,013,696 49.2


urban in the sense that it lives in communities of over 2,000. This relatively low degree of urbanization in view of the advanced industrial development is explained by the absence of domestic fuels and the concomitant necessity in earlier days for Swedish industry to disperse along rivers and streams, the most economical sources of power. There are numerous small plants along the waterways, particularly in the north, where mining and forestry are important industries. For this reason some demographers have counted as urban all communities in Sweden of over 200 inhabitants. The highly developed public works and social welfare programs provide many of these small communities with the basic amenities of urban living. Using this criterion, Sweden is about 80% urbanized.

The internal migration of the population has meant a continuing shift out of the north and out of the rural areas into urban centers in the south. The most important of those expanding urban centers are Greater Stockholm, with offshoots extending toward Uppsala, Enkoping, and Sodertalje; urban places in western Sweden centering on Goteborg; and western Malmobus province in the south. Of the approximately 132 towns and cities in Sweden, however, only five exceed 100,000 people (Stockholm—747,490, Goteborg—446,875, Malmo—258,311, Vasteras—113,389, and Uppsala—101,696), and only 17 have more than 50,000 inhabitants. The population in these 22 cities accounts for 33% of the total population; this proportion rises to about 45% if suburbs are included.

The rural population is concentrated in the cultivated areas, namely the plains of Skane and Halland, the Malaren Lake District, Ostergotland, Vastergotland, Varmland, the river valleys in Dalarna, and the Gota Kanal valley. Rural settlements in the past consisted of both villages with the inhabitants attending outlying fields and single farms. During the sweeping land reforms of the 19th century, however, the villages were either split up or greatly changed, and today they appear more as clusters of private farms. The most common type of dwelling in rural areas is now the private farm, although in certain districts numerous remnants of the older building arrangements give the landscape a distinctive local character.


2. Ethnic types

Because of Sweden's relative geographic isolation, no significant ethnic mixing took place from the end of the Viking period (around 1050) to the mid-20th century. The population is remarkably homogenous, with only about 5% consisting of outside strains. Nearly half of this very small nonindigenous group is from southern and Eastern Europe, having been introduced in the post-World War II period to relieve the labor shortage. The only linguistic and ethnic minorities which have long been resident in Sweden are the 10,000 Lapps of the far north and the Finnish-speaking population, numbering about 50,000 along the border with Finland. Several thousand gypsies have bene resident in Sweden since the last century and have been the subject of special laws and ordinances. Figure 4 shows a typically Nordic woman and child, the overwhelmingly predominant strain, and a Lapplander.


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APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2009/06/16: CIA-RDP01-00707R000200090021-3

  1. The city and province of Stockholm are counted together.