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innbyggerne

Innbyggerne is the Norwegian term for the people who live in a particular place, such as a city, municipality, region, or country. The word is formed from inn- meaning "in" and a root related to dwelling or settlement, and the definite plural form is innbyggerne. In everyday usage, innbyggerne denotes residents based on place of residence rather than legal status as a citizen.

The term does not imply citizenship. An innbygger may be a citizen, a dual national, or a

In political discourse, discussions about innbyggerne typically address rights and responsibilities of residents, access to public

Because the term is tied to geography rather than legal status, it is commonly used by media,

non-citizen
who
lives
in
the
area.
It
is
commonly
used
in
demographic,
urban,
and
public-policy
contexts
to
refer
to
the
population
for
planning,
services,
and
governance.
In
statistics
and
public
reporting,
innbyggerne
are
counted
to
assess
population
size,
age
structure,
and
geographic
distribution;
data
may
be
broken
down
by
municipality,
region,
or
other
units.
services,
taxation,
representation
in
local
government,
and
social
cohesion.
The
concept
is
broadly
analogous
to
"the
inhabitants"
or
"the
residents"
in
other
languages,
and
while
it
overlaps
with
citizenship,
it
emphasizes
place
of
residence
rather
than
membership
in
the
political
community.
researchers,
and
public
authorities
when
describing
population
characteristics
or
evaluating
policies
that
affect
all
people
living
in
an
area.