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Documentation: European Statistics 1990
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Publisher: Eurostat, The Statistical Office of the European Union
Document: Eurostat: Technical Documentation
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Social Explorer; Eurostat: Technical Documentation
Eurostat: Technical Documentation
1. Demographic statistics methodology
A review of definitions and methods of collection in 44 European countries.
Introduction
Eurostat serves as a point of reference for demographic data on European countries. Data on population, vital events and migration are collected regularly from the National Statistical Institutes, in accordance with existing EU regulations on demographic and migration statistics.
Still, while some basic definitions and the programme of the statistical tables to be transmitted to Eurostat have been fixed in the Regulations, the production of these data in the EU and in the neighbouring countries is characterised by disparate definitions and methodologies.
This documentation is an important source of information for users interested in gaining a deeper understanding of the peculiarities of the national production of official demographic statistics, and of their international comparability.
Eurostat continues to cooperate with its partners in the European Statistical System to harmonise the production of statistics, particularly in this area, where current trends have important implications for European societies.
1.1. Population
1.1.1. Estimating the size of the population
Most of the countries (31 out of 44) estimate population on the basis of census. This method was used either in isolation (by 18 countries) or in combination with a register (DE, ES, FR, LV, LT and HU)1, (IE, HR, ME, RS and XK) or both (MT and RO. Except where legislation relevant to the population count enters into force on 1 January. This is the case with changes to geographical area; e.g. on 1 January 2014, Mayotte became part of the economic territory of France and there was a significant difference between the French population on 31 December 2013 and that on 1 January 2014. Population registers are the second most commonly used source for estimating population: they are used by 20 countries (BE, DE, DK, ES, FR, IT, LV, LT,HU, MT, NL, AT, RO, SI, FI, SE, LI, NO, CH and TR), of which six combine them with census information, one (IT) with information from surveys and two with both census and survey.
The most common reference date for counting population is 1 January, followed by 31 December. The difference between these two dates is actually nil2 at national level: the population is usually the same on1 January of calendar year t as on 31 December of calendar year t-1. IE and UK use mid-April and 30 June respectively as reference dates. Also BA uses the mid-year reference date. CZ, ME and RS use all three reference dates (1 January,31 December and mid-year).
In order to measure the population, one has to define it. Four main definitions are used,3 each based on different principles determining whether or not a given individual is included. In general, the principles used reflect national data needs; they are as follows:

1. de jure population - this is based on a persons legal right to settle in the country; it therefore covers all persons who, on a given date, either have citizenship orhave been granted a residence permitor visa;
2. de facto population - all people present in the country at the time of the counting regardless of whetherthey have residence;
3. registered population - all persons listed in one or more registers kept by the national authorities on the reference date; and
4. usually residentpopulation - persons who4:
  • lived in the country for a continuous period of atleast 12 months before the reference time5; or
  • arrived in the country during the 12 months before the reference time with the intention of stayingthere for at least one year


  • The definition recommended by the Conference of EuropeanStatisticians (CES)6 and incorporated in the EUs population and housing census Regulationis7 based on place of usual residence. Usually resident population is the most widespread definition: 34 of the 44 countries surveyed reported using it, of which 23 use it in isolation, four (FR, RO8, FI and CH) use it in combination with the concept of legal population, four (DE, ES, IT, XK) refer to it together with registered population and three (BE, PL9 and NO) use three concepts. The second most commonly used definition is registered population: this was used in isolation by seven countries (CZ, DK, NL, AT,SE, MD and RO), in combination with legal populationby two (SK and TR) and together with de facto population by one (MD). The only country that uses legal populationonly is RS.

    As regards the definition of usual residence, most countries (33 out of 44) apply a time criterion of 12 months or at least 12 months. Nine countries report having no time criteria. Of the 33 countries referring to the usually resident population and applying a 12-month or an at least 12 months criterion, 11 (IRL, HRV, CYP, HUN, PRT, UKR, MLT, LIE, MNE, SRB and ALB) mention intention to stay in the country for (atleast) this amount of time as a key criterion.
    1.2. Birth
    All 44 countries surveyed register births of children born to parents who are resident in their territory (for the statistical treatment of children born abroad and births to 'non-residents').
    1.2.1. Definition of 'live birth'
    Most countries use the standard international definition of 'live birth'. As defined by the World Health Organisation (WHO), a live birth is the complete expulsion or extraction from the mother, irrespective of the duration of the pregnancy, of a baby which then breathes or shows any other sign of life, such as beating of the heart, pulsation of the umbilical cord or definite movement of the voluntary muscles, whether or not the umbilical cord has been cut or the placenta is attached. Each product of such a birth is considered 'live born'10.
    1.2.2. Declaring a birth
    All 44 countries surveyed register births of children born to parents who are resident in their territory (for the statistical treatment of children born abroad and births to 'non-residents'.

    Persons who can make the declaration

    There are, however, differences in registration procedures and how the requisite information is collected. Three groups of countries can be identified according to who is responsible for making the declaration; this could be:
  • the parents (EE, EL, ES, LT, LU, UK and ME);
  • the hospital (BE, BG, DK, SK, FI, LI, NO, ME, RS, MD and GE); or
  • another body — generally, the civil registration authorities attached to the justice or home/international affairs ministry (IE, FR, IT, NL,RO, BY, XK, UA, AM and AZ).

  • In some countries, births can be declared by all three of the above (e.g. DE, AT11 and PT) or by two, in various combinations as follows:
  • parents and hospital (HR, LV, MT, SE, CH, TR and AL);
  • hospital and civil authorities (HU, RS and RU); and
  • parents and civil authorities (PL).

  • In CZ, births must be reported to registry offices by the hospital in question or, if the baby is delivered elsewhere, by a parent or another person with knowledge of the birth. In LV, the legislation requires local authorities to declare the birth of a child where parents have not done so; if the birth takes place in a prison or shelter, the head of the institution has to declare it. In HR, SI, SE, CH and RU, the place of birth determines who is entitled to make the declaration: the general rule is that births in a hospital or healthcare institution must be declared by that institution, while births occurring elsewhere must be declared to the civil authorities by the family.
    In PL, the physician fills in some of the information on the birth declaration (medical characteristics and some identi fication details). Civil registration officers add socio-demographic characteristics taken from registers and the parents' declaration.
    In NL, the parents register the child with the municipal authority where the child is born, which draws up the birth declaration. The information in the declaration is then entered in the population registry system, from where additional information can be obtained (e.g. parents' personal identifiers, age, etc.)

    Time limit for birth declaration

    The time limit for declaring a birth varies widely, from one day in FI, HU, PT and SK to 90 days in CY, IE and LT. Outside the EU, the range varies from the same day (GE) to a year (AM).
    Seven countries (BE, HR, MT, RO, SI, RS and BA) require declarations within 15 days.
    Time limits can be based on calendar days and working days. Limits of one or two days usually refer to working days.
    1.2.3. The contents of a birth declaration
    The contents of a birth declaration vary widely among the 44 countries surveyed. The child's gender and date of birth are registered on the birth certificate in all the countries, as is the place of birth. All countries collect other information, which in many cases includes the child's name and personal identifier, the mother's and father's age and the marital status of both parents. A smaller number ask for additional characteristics about the new-born child on the declaration, often regarding legitimacy, citizenship, whether live or stillborn, multiple or single birth, and birth order. In 14 countries (BE, BG, EL, LV, LU, AT, PL, PT, RO, SK, NO, AL, BA and AZ), all five of the above characteristics are registered on the birth certificate.
    Data on the person who makes the declaration of birth are also registered. In 32 countries, this person's name is on the declaration, while his/her address is registered in 23.
    Information on type of birth (spontaneous delivery, caesarean section, forceps delivery, etc.) and place of delivery is collected by seven countries (BE, EE, PL, AL, BY, BA and MD) and 26 (BE, BG, EE, IE, EL, ES, FR, HR, LU, MT, NL, PL, PT, RO, SI, SK, FI, UK, CH, RS, AL, BY, BA, XK, MD and GE) respectively. However, 18 countries (CZ, DK, DE, IT, CY, LV, LT, HU, AT, PT, SE, LI, NO, ME, TR, UA, AM, AZ and RU)12do not register any details about the place of delivery. The birth declaration in 19 countries includes duration of pregnancy (BE, BG, CZ, EE, IE, EL, HU, MT, AT, PL, RO SI, SK, CH, AL, BY, XK, MD and GE)13.
    As mentioned above, birth declarations usually include data on parents as well: often their age, marital status, nationality and country of birth. All these details (for both parents) can be found on the declarations in 16 countries (BE, BG, DE, EE, EL, FR, LV, LU, MT, AT, PT, SK, LI, AL, BY, RU, AM, AZ and GE)14. RO collects all these details only for mothers. Information on the highest level of educational attainment is collected in 19 countries (BE, BG, CZ15 , EE, EL, HR, HU, AT, PL, RO, SK, ME, AL, BY, BA, XK, RU, AM and AZ), in RO and RU only for the mothers.
    Collected children's and parents' characteristics as registered in birth declarations in the countries varies widely among countries. BG and EE register 27 of the 30 selected items in the table, while FI, HR and CY record fewer than 10. Outside the EU, BY is the country that registers the highest number of items (28) and MD and UA collect the least information (16 items).
    However, in some countries, such as NL, DK, PT or CZ the information in the birth declaration is integrated in the register, from where a number of other information can or could be deduced or calculated. For example the mother's and father's age can be deduced from their date of birth etc., thus this information could be considered as available. In PT the collection of live births data for statistical purposes includes information from the birth declaration plus a set of other variables collected simultaneously in an electric questionnaire. In DK, medical information on births is taken from the central population register and supplemented with data from the birth register, retrieved by the NSI, while information on the mother's and father's background is compiled from administrative registers. Thus it can be said that the declaration of birth is a general indication of the information available for statistical offices, but in many cases it is not their only source of information.
    1.2.4. Live births abroad, 'non-residents' and mother's age
    37 of the 44 countries surveyed register live births abroad, but only 21 include them in their national statistics.16 Of the 31 countries that register live births to 'non-residents', 12 (IE, EL, ES, FR, HU, PT, RO,UK, BY17. XK, MD and RU) include them in their national statistics. Based on these differences, four groups of countries can be identified:
  • those that include children born abroad and exclude children to 'non-residents' born on their territory (BE, CZ, DK, DE, CY, LT, LU, NL18, SI, SE and CH, BY);
  • those that exclude the former and include the latter (HU, ES, PT and RU);
  • those that exclude both (BG, EE, HR, LV, MT, NL, PL, SK19, ME, RS, AL and BA); and
  • those that include both (RO, XK and MD).

  • All the countries are able to produce birth data by mother's age at the time of giving birth. Some (BE, CZ, DK, DE, EE, FR, CY, LV, LU, MT, NL, SI, SK, SE, LI, NO, CH, BA and GE) also produce data by mother’s age reached at the end of the year.
    1.3. Death
    According to the United Nations (UN) definition, death is 'the permanent disappearance of all evidence of life at any time after live birthhas taken place (postnatal cessation of vital functions without capability of resuscitation). This definition therefore excludes foetal deaths'.
    The majority of the countries surveyed follow the UN definition. Variations nevertheless exist:
  • DK uses loss of brain function to define death;
  • LT defines death as the irreversible cessation of life of the human body as a whole; and
  • RU uses both the above criteria (brain death and irreversible death of human body).

  • 1.3.1. Declaring a death
    Deaths are registered in all 44 countries surveyed, i.e. all people who die in the countries' 'territories are, in principle, registered as deceased.
    In almost all countries, doctors or relatives can fill in the declaration of death, which must be made at a local or district civil registration office. In several countries the information in this document is complemented by other sources, such as a separate declaration made by a doctor or a statistical questionnaire collected simultaneously with the registration of death20.
    Time limits for declaring a death are generally much shorter than those for declaring a birth. In the majority of the countries surveyed, deaths must be declared within zero to seven days. However:
  • in AL, AZ and TR, deaths must be declared within 10 days;
  • in IE and CY, the declaration can be made as much as a year later; and
  • there is no time limit in NL

  • 1.3.2. The contents of a death declaration
    Infomation about death declarations vary between the 44 countries. The date of death is included in declarations in all countries and the name and date of birth of the deceased in all except BE, NL (name excluded), FI, SE and NO (name and date of birth excluded).
    16 countries do not register the age of the deceased, although in all these countries except FI, SE and NO this information could be derived from processing.
    32 countries (FI, SE and NO included) register the personal identification number (PIN), whereby in a number of countries the declaration can be linked to other registered data.
    The deceased's religion is registered in CY, DE (till 2013) and RS, while the highest level of educational attainment is registered in BE, BG, CZ21, EE, EL, HR, IT, HU, PL, PT, RO, SK, ME, TR, BY, BA, XK, MD, RU, AM and AZ. EE also records place of burial.
    Citizenship and country of birth are registered by 32 and 30 countries, respectively, while marital status and cause of death are recorded by 37.
    EE, EL, IT, CY, HU, RO, SK and BA register the most items on the death declaration, while FI and SE register only a very limited amount of information. However, several countries can link different sources in order to obtain more information. In NL for example the declaration of death is made up by the general practitioner (doctor) and sent to Statistics Netherlands through the municipal authority where the person has died. The information in the document is combined with the population registry information available at Statistics Netherlands. Secondary variables like: country of birth, date of birth, address, sex etc. are obtained from the register, not from the death declaration itself.
    1.3.3. Persons dying abroad and deaths of 'non-residents'
    Deaths are registered in all 44 countries surveyed, i.e. all people who die in the countries' 'territories are, in principle, registered as deceased.
    In almost all countries, doctors or relatives can fill in the declaration of death, which must be made at a local or district civil registration office. In several countries the information in this document is complemented by other sources, such as a separate declaration made by a doctor or a statistical questionnaire collected simultaneously with the registration of death22.
    Time limits for declaring a death are generally much shorter than those for declaring a birth. In the majority of the countries surveyed, deaths must be declared within zero to seven days. However:
  • in AL, AZ and TR, deaths must be declared within 10 days;
  • in IE and CY, the declaration can be made as much as a year later; and
  • there is no time limit in NL

  • 1.4. Marriages and legal unions
    Civil marriage is possible in all 44 countries surveyed. However, the relationship between religious and civil marriage is not always the same: some countries recognise religious marriage as equivalent to civil marriage, while others do not. Religious marriage affects civil status in 11 countries (CZ, DK, EE, HR, IT, LV, LT, MT, PL, FI and LI).
    At the moment of surveying the countries (spring 2013) it was in eight (BE, ES, FR, DK, NL, NO, PT, SE23 that same-sex couples could marry officially. Such marriages are registered by the local registrar. Several other countries reserve the possibility of a legal union for same sex couples.
    All countries except DK have marriage certificates/declarations. In general, the administration responsible for collecting the requisite information is the civil registry office. There are also some country-specific features, as follows:
  • in a number of countries (BE, BG, FR, IT, LU, NL, CH, ME, RS and XK), the local registry office for the territorial unit in which the marriage took place has to collect the information in the marriage certificate/declaration;
  • in BG, marriage certificates are issued by the local population registry office for the territorial unit in which the marriage took place; while information on marriages is provided for statistical purposes by the regional offices of the population register;
  • in three countries (PT, BY and AZ), marriages must be registered with the justice ministry;
  • in five countries (EE, EL, RO, SI and TR), marriage certificates are kept by the ministry of interior;
  • in SE and NO, people who get married must inform the local tax agency and, in GE, the public service development agency.
    Time limits in the EU for registering/declaring a marriage generally exist and range between one day (ES) and 56 days (IE). Elsewhere, the lowest limit is 10 days (TR) and the highest three months (AM). Some differences:
  • in BG, DE, HU, AT, RO, SI and RU, notification of a new marriage should be sent the same day;
  • in BE, FR, FI, SE and CH, there is no legal time limit, but the person officiating at the wedding is expected to do it without delay;
  • in some EU countries (CZ, EE, HR, IT, CY, LV, LT and PL), there is a distinction between civil marriage, which must be declared immediately, and religious marriage, where the deadline ranges from three to five days to two weeks; and
  • there is no time limit in NL, UK, LI, NO, ME and MD, and time limit is not specified in LU, RS, BA, XK and GE.
  • 1.4.1. Minimum marriageable age
    The minimum legal age at which men and women can marry without parental consent is 18 in all the countries except AT, where it is 16. In most countries, younger people can get married if a courtor parents/guardians grant permission, or if certain specified conditions are met.
    In 20 countries, 16-year-olds can get married with parental consent. In EE, LT, SI, AL, BY and XK the minimum age is 15 and in ES it is 14. In EL, men may be allowed to marry when they are 14, while for women the minimum age to receive court permission to marry is 12. In four countries (EL, LU, AT and PL) the legally required age to marry is not the same for men and women, with a difference of two years.
    1.4.2. The contents of a marriage declaration
    Marriage declarations exist in all countries except DK. In most countries, the date and place of marriage, the names of the spouses, their surnames before marriage, their dates of birth, nationality and previous marital status are recorded on the marriage certificate.
    Other information included in the certificate varies widely among countries. For example, information on the spouses' highest level of educational attainment is included in 17 countries (CZ24, EE, EL, HR, IT, HU, PL, PT, RO, SK, ME, TR, BY, BA, XK, AM and AZ). Nine (DE, EL, HR, CY, LV, AT, CH, BA and XK) collect information on their religion. 12 countries (DE, EE, LU, HU, AT, PT, NO, CH, BY, XK, RU and AZ) register how many children each of them has (either together or from previous relationships)25.
    In HU for example, surnames before and after marriage are included in the marriage declaration, but not recorded in the statistical database. Home address is available at settlement level and information on both spouses' country of birth will be available from 2014.
    Information on both spouses' economic activity status is collected in HR, EL, HU, IT, PT and RO.
    In the EU, the countries that collect the most information on the marriage declaration are EE, EL, LV and PT (13 items of the 15 selected); outside the EU, XK collects 14 items out of 15.
    However, countries can link different sources in order to obtain more information. In NL the data on the marriage declaration document is integrated in the population registry system. This in turn allows for access to secondary variables like date of birth of the spouses, their address, citizenship etc. In PT, the collection of data on marriages for statistical purposes includes information from the civil registry (marriage registration) as well as a set of other variables collected simultaneously in an electronic questionnaire.
    1.4.3. Marriages conducted abroad and between 'non-residents'
    Unlike births and deaths, which involve individuals, marriages are contracted between two persons, who do not necessarily belong to the same population. Also, they may be contracted outside the country of residence of one or both of the spouses. It is therefore useful to distinguish between the following situations:
    Case 1 represents the most common situation: two people who reside in the same country and get married in that country. In this case, the marriage certificate is drawn up in that country, the marriage is entered in the marriage statistics of that country and no other country is involved, either administratively or in terms of population statistics.

    Looking at the other cases from the point of view of spouse 1 or his/her country of residence respectively:

  • in Case 2, the spouses reside in different countries but the marriage is contracted in the country of spouse 1;
  • in Case 3, the spouses have residence in the same country, but get married elsewhere; this is common among immigrants;
  • in Case 4, the spouses come from different countries and decide to get married in a third country.


  • Case 2 marriages are generally treated and counted no differently from other marriages. Marriages contracted abroad (i.e. Cases 3 and 4) are registered in 30 of the 44 countries surveyed. Of these, 11 (BE, HR, CY, FI, LI, MD, NL, RS, SK, SI and TR) register all marriages of their residents that take place abroad, others apply various criteria to determine whether or not a marriage is registered:

  • ES, RO and NO register only those marriages where at least one spouse has citizenship of their country;
  • LT registers only those marriages where at least one spouse is usually resident in LT;
  • SE registers only those marriages where both spouses have SE citizenship;
  • DE, EE, XK and GE register their citizens' marriages only if the spouses officially request it.


  • Of the countries that register marriages taking place abroad, 20 include them in their national statistics, while BE, BG, EE, CY, PL, SI, ME, RS, TR and RU do not. In the remaining countries, there is no legal requirement to register such marriages.

    Marriages of 'non-residents' are registered in 26 countries, but 14 (BG, CZ, EE, HR, LV, LT, NL, AT, PL, SI, SE, CH, RS and BA) do not include these in national statistics.

    Most countries' national statistics include marriages of residents contracted abroad and exclude marriages by 'nonresidents'. However:

  • CZ includes only cases where at least one spouse has a registered residence in the country, regardless where the marriage is contracted;
  • BG, EE, AT, PL, SI and RS exclude both categories;
  • IE, EL, FR, IT, CY, HU, PT, UK and ME normally base their marriage statistics on marriages contracted in the country, irrespective of the spouses' countries of residence; they exclude their residents' marriages abroad;
  • DE, MT, ES, RO and XK include both categories; their marriage statistics include all marriages contracted in their countries (irrespective of the spouses' countries of residence) and all their residents' marriages abroad.

  • 1.4.4. Legal unions
    Since the 1960s, living arrangements other than marriage have become more common in Europe. Some countries have fully or partially legalised living arrangements other than marriage, and allow couples with such arrangements to be registered in a more or less similar way to married couples. These arrangements became common practice in the north of Europe much earlier than in the south.
    Among the 44 countries surveyed, legal/civil unions are allowed in 19 (BE, CZ, DK, DE, ES, FR, IE, EL, LU, HU, MT, NL, AT, SI, FI, SE, UK, NO and CH). In CZ, DE, HU, AT, FI, SI, UK and CH, registered/civil partnership status is reserved for same-sex couples and in EL for heterosexual couples. In the rest of the countries where legal/civil unions exist they are possible both for heterosexual and same-sex couples.
    Legal/civil unions are usually registered by municipalities. In DE and MT, this is done by the registrar’s office, in SI by the ministry of interior and in NO by the tax administration.
    In CZ, only registered same-sex partnerships are codified, but the data are not collected for statistical purposes. BE produces statistics on legal cohabitation but not on legal unions.
    1.4.4.1. The contents of a legal union declaration
    Like marriage certificates, legal union declarations feature a set of basic information: the date and place of the legal union, and the partners' dates of birth.
    In eight countries (BE, DE, IE, HU, SI, FI, UK and CH), such certificates also include information about both partners' previous marital status.
    DE registers the religion of partners in a legal union, while in HU the declaration contains their highest level of educational attainment and occupational status. MT equally registers the spouses' parents' name and surname, maiden name of the mothers, as well as information about the witnesses: name and surname, date and place of birth, place of residence.
    Similarly to marriage declarations, the information in the document in NL is integrated in the population registry system. Secondary variables like: date of birth of spouses, address, citizenship etc. can be drawn from this register.
    1.4.4.2. Legal unions abroad and between 'non-residents'
    Legal unions abroad are registered in most of the countries where such living arrangements are allowed, except IE, EL, ES, LU, HU, AT and the UK. Normally, if they are registered, they are also included in national statistics, except in NO and SI. ES does not include legal unions in national statistics. MT includes civil unions abroad it its statistics if one of the parties is a citizen of MT.
    DE, IE, EL, HU, NL, SI, UK, NO and CH register legal unions contracted between 'non-residents' but NL, SI, NO and CH do not include them in national statistics.MT only registers legal unions contracted between 'non-residents' if one of them is MT citizen.
    1.5. Divorces
    Divorce is possible in all the countries surveyed.The oldest regulations are in FI, where divorce has been allowed since 1571. In LU, people have been able to divorce since the beginning of the 19th century. Other European countries in which divorce was made possible in that century are NL (1804), BE (1840), SE (statistics available since 1831), UK (185526), CH (1875), HU (1876), FR (1884). In 11 countries (BG, CZ27, DE, EL, HR, LV, LT, AT, PL, PT, TR and XK), married couples obtained the right to divorce in the first half of the 20th century. In IE (1996-97), ES (1981) and AZ (1990), divorce has become possible only relatively recently. Divorce legislation was introduced in MT in 2009.
    Distinct statistics on the dissolution of legal unions, as opposed to divorces, are collected by all countries that allow legal unions except IE.
    1.5.1. Conditions for divorce
    In most countries divorces are decided upon by the court and almost everywhere a divorce has to be requested by one or both partners. Additional remarks can be made for a number of countries, as follows:

  • in nine countries (BE, CZ, DE, EL, LV, LU, NL, XK and RU), 'structural disruption of the marriage and no prospect of reconciliation' is one of the conditions for obtaining the divorce;
  • in FR, LT, MT, UK and XK, adultery is one of the possible reasons for granting a divorce; in CZ, LT and RU, the marriage has to have lasted for a certain amount of time;
  • in six countries (CZ, DE, LV, FI, XK and RU), the couple has to have lived apart for a certain amount of time (usually one year); in CH, two years of separation are required to obtain the divorce (unless serious reasons rule out continuation of the marriage); in CY and IT three years of legal separation is the main condition for obtaining a divorce;
  • five countries (CZ, NL, SI, XK and RU) require proper provision for dependents (children, elderly people) before a divorce is granted;
  • in LV, a divorce can be obtained for reasons linked to a threat to a partner's life or health, but also when one of the spouses is cohabiting with another person with whom they have had, or are expecting, a child;
  • in PT, the divorce might be requested by one spouse against the other (divorce without the consent of a spouse, requested in the court) or of both (divorce by mutual consent, requested in the civil register). Grounds for divorce without the consent of a spouse are: a de facto separation for a year, the change of the mental faculties of the other spouse when this has lasted for more than a year and its severity compromises the possibility of life in common; the absence without any news of the absent for at least a year, and any other fact which shows the rupture of marriage, regardless of a fault of the spouses;
  • in SK, the conditions for granting a divorce include factors relating to the personal behaviour of the spouses.
  • 1.5.2. The contents of a divorce declaration
    In general, the declaration of divorce is a legal document to be filled in by the relevant court after it has pronounced its judgment. Such documents are issued in 36 of the 44 countries surveyed. In MT for example no certificate is issued, instead there is an annotation on the side of the marriage/civil union certificate.
    The contents of these certificates vary widely across countries. EE and HU include the most information on such a certificate, followed by TR, GE and ME. Date of registration of divorce, date of marriage, date of birth and citizenship of both ex-spouses are the most commonly registered data. The number of common children is also included in 17 and the highest level of educational attainment in 15 countries. In EE, IT, RS and AM, certificates indicate the ex-spouses' socio-economic status. In BG, CZ, DE, IT, CY, LU, HU, PL, PT, RO, SK, CH and TR, the certificates also include information on the reasons for the divorce/dissolution.
    Like in the case of the other declarations, the declaration of divorce is a general indication of the information available for statistical offices, but not necessarily the only source of information. In PT there are two instruments/declarations that support data collection: one for divorces granted in Court and another for divorces granted by the Civil Registry. For NL the gathering of the information follows this process: the information in the divorce declaration is sent to the municipality where the former spouses live and is integrated there in the population registry system. Secondary variables like date of birth of spouse, address, citizenship etc. are drawn from the register not from the marriage dissolution certificate. A number of variables like marriage order for example, are deducted from registry information within Statistics Netherlands. Similarly, in BG information on date of birth of both partners, their place of birth, home address, age country of birth, citizenship can be derived from the register. In UK age at divorce is derived while processing from age at marriage.
    1.5.3. Divorces of residents abroad and of 'non-residents'
    Of the 29 countries that register divorces abroad, 18 (CZ, DK, FR, IT, LT, MT, NL, PL, RO, FI, SE, LI, CH, BY, XK, MD, RU, GE) include these data in their national statistics. Divorces involving 'non-residents' are registered in 26 countries, but of these they are included in national statistics in 12 (EL, ES, FR, IT, HU, MT, PT, RO, UK, NO, XK and AZ). Five countries (FR, IT, MT, RO and XK) include both in their national statistics.
    Duration completed at the time of divorce is used for the definition of duration of marriage at time of divorce in all the countries surveyed except DK, FR, LV and AM, which exclusively use duration reached at the end of the calendar year in their statistics. 11 countries (CZ, EE, IE, LU, NL, SK, SE, NO, CH, BA and GE) use both definitions.
    Annex I - List of country codes
    CodeName
    BEBelgium
    BGBulgaria
    CZCzech Republic
    DKDenmark
    DEGermany
    EEEstonia
    IEIreland
    ELGreece
    ESSpain
    FRFrance (including overseas departments - DOM)
    HRCroatia
    ITItaly
    CYCyprus
    LVLatvia
    LTLithuania
    LULuxembourg
    HUHungary
    MTMalta
    NLNetherlands
    ATAustria
    PLPoland
    PTPortugal
    RORomania
    SISlovenia
    SKSlovakia
    FIFinland
    SESweden
    UKUnited Kingdom
    LILiechtenstein
    NONorway
    CHSwitzerland
    MEMontenegro
    ALAlbania
    RSSerbia
    TRTurkey
    BYBelarus
    BABosnia and Herzegovina
    XKKosovo (under UNSCR 1244)
    MDMoldova
    RURussian Federation
    UAUkraine
    AMArmenia
    AZAzerbaijan
    GEGeorgia
    Annex II - Country-specific registration forms
    For examples of country-specific registration forms: http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/documents/10186/6799655/KS-GQ-15-002-ANNEX+5.zip
    Footnotes
    1. [See Annex I for a list of country codes]
    2. [Except where legislation relevant to the population count enters into force on 1 January. This is the case with changes to geographical area; e.g. on 1 January 2014, Mayotte became part of the economic territory of France and there was a significant difference between the French population on 31 December 2013 and that on 1 January 2014.]
    3. [Lanzieri, G. (2013): Population definitions at the 2010 censuses round in the countries of the UNECE region. Paper for the 15th meeting of UNECE Group of Experts on Population and Housing Censuses, Geneva, from 30.9 to 3.10.2013.]
    4. [As defined in Regulation (EU) No 1260/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council on European demographic statistics, URL (26.02.2015): http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:32013R1260&from=EN ]
    5. [Regardless of temporary or short-term absences for recreation, personal or business visits, etc. ]
    6. [ Lanzieri, G. (2013): Some proposals for the Revision of the CES Recommendations on the population to be enumerated. Paper for the 15th meeting of UNECE Group of Experts on Population and Housing Censuses, Geneva, from 30.9 to 3.10.2013.]
    7. [European Parliament and Council Regulation (EC) No 763/2008 on population and housing censuses]
    8. [RO calculates usually resident population at national level and a combination of legal and usually resident population for other levels. ]
    9. [PL has used three concepts, but the one considered the most important is 'legal' or 'dejure' (actually living) population, i.e. those having a registered place of residence to stay permanently in PL. The criterion for duration of stay is three months.]
    10. [RU: Live birth is the moment of foetus separation from the mother's body through the childbirth when the pregnancy term is 22 weeks or more and child body weight is 500 grams or more (less for multiple births.) If the mass of the body is unknown - when length of child body is 25 cm or more and new-born gives signs of birth. If a pregnancy term is less than 22 weeks, weight is less than 500 grams, child body length is less than 25cm live-born is a child who has lived not less than 7 days.
    LT: Live birth is the delivery of a live-born child, i. e. a child showing evidence of life irrespective of the duration of pregnancy.
    SK: Child showing at least one sign of life, with birth weight 500 grams or more, or with a birth weight of 499 grams or less, if survives 24 hours after birth]

    11. [According to civil registry law in AT, the following (in the following order) are responsible for declaring the birth: 1. the general manager of the hospital where the child is born; 2. physicians or midwives present at the birth; 3. the father or mother, if they are able to do so within the deadline; 4. any government office performing inquiries on the birth; 5. any other persons with knowledge of the birth.]
    12. [CZ and DK can retrieve these from related information sources. In CZ, the report for the NSI does not contain this information, but medical reports on mother/new-born do.]
    13. [ In some cases, like for example PT this can be deduced from related information sources.]
    14. [Same as above.]
    15. [Collected on a voluntary basis.]
    16. [Also LV partly includes live births abroad in its national statistics. Data on the usual residence of the mother before and after the birth are used, as is information from the health register (the child has to be seen by a doctor once a month in the first six months and then twice between the seven and 11 months). If the mother is usually resident in the country (even if she was abroad for a short period), but the birth occurs abroad, this is included in national statistics. Live births to 'non-resident' women in the country are partly registered but not included in national statistics.]
    17. [Vital events, marriage and divorce of BY residents temporarily living or staying abroad are included in the national statistics if the events were registered at the consular institutions or diplomatic missions of BY. Duplicate copies of records of births, deaths, marriages and divorces occurring to BY residents temporarily living or staying abroad are then annually (before 31 December following the reporting year) sent to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of BY.]
    18. [NL registers children born abroad where at least one parent is resident in the Netherlands.]
    19. [SK included live births abroad in national statistics until 2011, but has not done so since.]
    20. [In Portugal, for example, data on deaths are collected from three different sources:
    (1) The death certificate, filled by a doctor
    (2) The death registration, made at a Civil Registration Office by a relative or other person on his/her behalf
    (3) A statistical questionnaire collected simultaneously with the registration of death by the Civil Registration Office.
    The data from these three sources are compiled by Statistics Portugal into a unique database.]

    21. [On a voluntary basis.]
    22. [Since March 2014 marriages are also available for same-sex couples in England and Wales.]
    23. [On a voluntary basis. ]
    24. [CH and DE registers the number of children the couple has together (not overall number of children of each spouse). Certificates in EE, HU and PT also show separately how many children the spouses had before marrying together, how many children come from previous relationships.]
    25. [Divorce has been allowed since 1855 in Scotland, 1858 in England and 1971 in Northern Ireland. ]
    26. [In CZ, two different forms of marriage dissolution existed in 1918-49.]
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