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・ Nicaragua lunar sample displays
・ Nicaragua military ranks
・ Nicaragua national baseball team
・ Nicaragua national basketball team
・ Nicaragua National Football Stadium
・ Nicaragua national football team
・ Nicaragua National Institute of Information Development
・ Nicaragua national under-20 football team
・ Nicaragua v. United States
・ Nicaragua War White Paper
・ Nicaragua women's national football team
・ Nicaragua women's national volleyball team
・ Nicaraguan (disambiguation)
・ Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central American Relief Act
・ Nicaraguan Air Force
Nicaraguan Americans
・ Nicaraguan Athletics Federation
・ Nicaraguan Campaign Medal
・ Nicaraguan Christian Democratic Union
・ Nicaraguan Civil Aeronautics Institute
・ Nicaraguan Civil War
・ Nicaraguan civil war (1926–27)
・ Nicaraguan Constitutional Assembly election, 1938 and Nicaraguan presidential election, 1939
・ Nicaraguan Constitutional Assembly election, 1947
・ Nicaraguan Constitutional Assembly election, 1972
・ Nicaraguan cuisine
・ Nicaraguan Cycling Federation
・ Nicaraguan córdoba
・ Nicaraguan Democratic Force
・ Nicaraguan Democratic Movement


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Nicaraguan Americans : ウィキペディア英語版
Nicaraguan Americans

A Nicaraguan American ((スペイン語:nicaraguo-americano), or ) is an American of Nicaraguan descent.
The Nicaraguan population at the 2010 Census was 348,202. Nicaraguans are the eleventh largest Hispanic group in the United States and the fourth largest Central American population.
More than two-thirds of the Nicaraguan population in the US resides in California or Florida.
In California, Nicaraguans are more dominant in the Greater Los Angeles Area and San Francisco Bay Area. Large populations also reside in the Inland Empire and the cities of Sacramento, San Diego, and San Jose.
In Florida, 90% of Nicaraguans reside in the Miami Metropolitan Area. Miami-Dade County is home to 30% of Nicaraguans residing in the US.
==Immigrational history==
Nicaraguans have immigrated to the United States in small groups since the early 1900s, but their presence was especially felt over the last three decades of the 20th century. The Nicaraguan community is mainly concentrated in three major urban areas: Metropolitan Miami, Greater Los Angeles, and San Francisco Bay Area. A more affluent group of Nicaraguan Americans reside in the New York metropolitan area.
According to Immigration and Naturalization Service figures, 23,261 Nicaraguans were admitted as permanent residents between 1976 and 1985; 75,264 were admitted between 1986 and 1993; and 94,582 between 1994 and 2002, with a total of 193,107 Nicaraguan immigrants being granted legal status since 1976.〔
The earliest documents of immigration from Nicaragua to the United States was combined in total with those of other Central American countries. However, according to the U.S. Census Bureau some 7,500 Nicaraguans legally immigrated from 1967 to 1976. An estimated 28,620 Nicaraguans were living in the U.S. in 1970, 90% of which self-reported as ''white'' on the 1970 census. Most Nicaraguan immigrants during the late 1960s were women: there were only 60 male Nicaraguan immigrants for every 100 female immigrants during this period.
Over 62 percent of the total documented immigration from 1979 to 1988 occurred after 1984.〔 In 1998 more than two million Nicaraguans were left homeless due to hurricane Mitch, as a result many Nicaraguans received permanent residence or temporary protected status (TPS) in the late 1990s.
According to the 1990 U.S. Census 168,659 of the total 202,658 documented Nicaraguans in the U.S. were born in Nicaragua. In 1992 approximately 10–12% of the Nicaraguan population had emigrated. These emigrants tended to be disproportionately of working age, better educated, and more often white-collar workers than nonmigrants. In addition, emigrants were more likely to come from larger premigration households and higher income households.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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