El Salvador - Refugee population by country or territory of asylum

Refugee population by country or territory of asylum

The value for Refugee population by country or territory of asylum in El Salvador was 63.00 as of 2020. As the graph below shows, over the past 48 years this indicator reached a maximum value of 20,730.00 in 1989 and a minimum value of 21.00 in 1999.

Definition: Refugees are people who are recognized as refugees under the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees or its 1967 Protocol, the 1969 Organization of African Unity Convention Governing the Specific Aspects of Refugee Problems in Africa, people recognized as refugees in accordance with the UNHCR statute, people granted refugee-like humanitarian status, and people provided temporary protection. Asylum seekers--people who have applied for asylum or refugee status and who have not yet received a decision or who are registered as asylum seekers--are excluded. Palestinian refugees are people (and their descendants) whose residence was Palestine between June 1946 and May 1948 and who lost their homes and means of livelihood as a result of the 1948 Arab-Israeli conflict. Country of asylum is the country where an asylum claim was filed and granted.

Source: Data before 2018 are from United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Statistics Database, Statistical Yearbook and data files, complemented by statistics on Palestinian refugees under the mandate of the UNRWA as published on its website. Data

See also:

Year Value
1972 100.00
1980 390.00
1985 210.00
1986 310.00
1987 300.00
1988 20,350.00
1989 20,730.00
1990 20,300.00
1991 20,099.00
1992 19,903.00
1993 161.00
1994 153.00
1995 153.00
1996 148.00
1997 106.00
1998 30.00
1999 21.00
2000 57.00
2001 69.00
2002 74.00
2003 246.00
2004 235.00
2005 51.00
2006 39.00
2007 39.00
2008 34.00
2009 32.00
2010 39.00
2011 39.00
2012 43.00
2013 42.00
2014 33.00
2015 46.00
2016 41.00
2017 40.00
2018 44.00
2019 48.00
2020 63.00

Classification

Topic: Labor & Social Protection Indicators

Sub-Topic: Migration