5 résultats pour "belarus"
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Belarus - country.
In the last complete census conducted in the Soviet Union in 1989, the population of Belarus was 10,151,806; a 2008 estimate was 9,685,768, giving the country apopulation density of 47 persons per sq km (121 per sq mi). The most notable demographic trend since the 1950s has been the steady migration of the population fromthe villages to urban centers, and the correspondent aging of the population remaining in the rural areas. In 1959 urban residents accounted for 31 percent of thepopulation; in...
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Belarus Facts and Figures.
Other 5 percent HEALTH AND EDUCATIONLife expectancy Total 70.3 years (2008 estimate) Female 76.4 years (2008 estimate) Male 64.6 years (2008 estimate) Infant mortality rate 7 deaths per 1,000 live births (2008 estimate) Population per physician 209 people (2006) Population per hospital bed 89 people (2003) Literacy rateTotal 99.7 percent (2005 estimate) Female 99.6 percent (2005 estimate) Male 99.8 percent (2005 estimate) Education expenditure as a share of gross national p...
- Biélorussie ou Belarus (en russe Bieloroussija, «Russie blanche»).
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Lithuania - country.
pollution. III PEOPLE Ethnic Lithuanians constitute about 80 percent of the country’s population. The proportion of Lithuanians increased slightly in the first years after the dissolution of theSoviet Union—many Lithuanians returned to their homeland from that country and abroad while some Russians, Ukrainians, and Belarusians left the country. Russiansand Poles constitute the country’s largest minority groups, each accounting for roughly 7 percent of the population. Jews were the largest mino...
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Biélorussie 1992-1993
En 1992-1993, la Biélorussie (ou "Belarus", selon la terminologie adoptée par les autorités de Minsk) est
restée le...
Biélorussie 1992-1993 En 1992-1993, la Biélorussie (ou "Belarus", selon la terminologie adoptée par les autorités de Minsk) est restée le "bon élève" d'une CEI (Communauté d'États indépendants) déchirée par les intérêts contradictoires des uns et des autres. Alors que plusieurs des ex-républiques de l'URSS (notamment l'Ukraine, la Moldavie, l'Azerbaïdjan et le Turkménistan) tâchaient de distendre les liens, déjà lâches, reliant entre eux les nouveaux États de la CEI, la Biélorussie a pris la tê...