New Finns (Finnish: uussuomalainen) are those people in Finland’s population who have a non-ethnic Finnish background and who reside permanently in the country. A new Finn may have various backgrounds; including immigrant, immigrant-origin, refugee and/or having come to Finland for family reasons. The term is especially used to emphasize those that have a Finnish citizenship and carry Finnish passports, to those foreigners who live permanently in Finland and intend to be naturalized in Finland at some point in the future. Finland has experienced large-scale, continuous non-European immigration only within the past couple of decades. The term uussuomalainen is beginning to come into usage to commonly refer to these new, naturalized Finns, who are beginning to change and affect the national landscape of the country.[1]

The term and its usage over the more conservative "immigrant" has received mixed reactions and stirred conversation on whether new terms like this are in fact necessary. The term is currently not in mainstream use and is mostly used in political context.[2]

New Finns are affecting the national psyche of Finland because they are becoming a new, different cultural force of their own[3] who are reshaping the national consciousness as to who a Finn can and cannot be.[4][5]

New Finns in general:

  1. reside permanently in Finland[6]
  2. adopt the Finnish language as their own, the exception are those New Finns who live in predominantly Swedish-speaking island or coastal areas such as the Åland or majority Swedish-speaking towns like Närpes.[7]
  3. have attained Finnish citizenship, or wish to eventually receive Finnish citizenship[8]
  4. move to Finland from another country or are born in Finland to parents or a parent who is not Finnish
  5. do not consider themselves to be ethnically Finnish but just Finnish
  6. assign their cultural identity to their geographic location. Finland is their home, and since geographically they are in Finland, they are Finns.
  7. have a background as an immigrant, immigrant background, refugee or someone who moved to Finland for family reasons

The term uussuomalainen also describes the descendants of immigrants better than the term "immigrant", because these people have in many cases been born and raised in Finland to parents from other countries.[citation needed]

Famous new Finns

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Many first and second generation immigrant background new Finns are well known in the cultural circles in Finland. Some well-known new-Finn writers are Toivo Flink, Neil Hardwick, Alexis Kouros, Zinaida Lindén, Harri István Mäki, Hella Wuolijoki, Jutta Zilliacus, Jason Tiilikainen, Arvi Perttu, Ranya Paasonen, Jim Thompson, Umayya Abu-Hanna and Wilson Kirwa. Sofi Oksanen has written about the plight of new-Finn women in today's Finland.[9]

Demographics

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For statistics, in 2017:[10]

  • 117,024 new Finns had a dual citizenship
  • 249,452 new Finns had a foreign citizenship
  • 372,802 new Finns were born outside of Finland
  • 373,325 new Finns had a native language other than Finland's official languages of Finnish, Swedish or Sámi
  • 384,123 new Finns had both parents born abroad

References

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  1. ^ "Uussuomalainen | Puheen Iltapäivä | Yle Puhe". yle.fi. Retrieved 2013-09-15.
  2. ^ "Ruben Stiller: Kantasuomalainen, uussuomalainen, perussuomalainen vai pseudosuomalainen?". Yle Uutiset.
  3. ^ "Syntyperäiset vai uussuomalaiset? – Kysy peloistasi! | Uusi Suomi" (in Finnish). Uusisuomi.fi. 2009-01-15. Retrieved 2013-09-15.
  4. ^ "Kotimaisten kielten keskus :: Maahanmuuttaja vai uussuomalainen?". Kotus.fi. Retrieved 2013-09-15.
  5. ^ "Ruben Stiller: Kantasuomalainen, uussuomalainen, perussuomalainen vai pseudosuomalainen? | Yle Uutiset". yle.fi. 2013-01-14. Retrieved 2013-09-15.
  6. ^ [1][dead link]
  7. ^ "Närpes står modell för lyckad integrering av invandrare | Österbotten" (in Swedish). svenska.yle.fi. Retrieved 2013-09-15.
  8. ^ "Requirements - The Finnish Immigration Service". Migri.fi. Retrieved 2013-09-15.
  9. ^ "Maria Säkö: Naisia menestyksen kääntöpuolelta".
  10. ^ "Immigrants in the population". www.stat.fi.