Monoethnicity


Monoethnicity is the existence of a single ethnic group in a given region or country. It is the opposite of polyethnicity.
China is the largest predominantly monoethnic country; 91.6% of the population are Han Chinese. An example of a largely monoethnic country is Japan. It is a common belief in Japan that the entire country is monoethnic, but a few ethnic minorities live in Japan. They represent around 1% of the whole population.
South Korea is a monoethnic country. There are small ethnic minorities that exist in South Korea, where they account for around 1% of the South Korean population. These include around 650,000 Chinese immigrants.
Most Sub-Saharan African countries have what would be considered a mono-racial society, but it is common to find dozens of ethnic groups within the same country.
The Yugoslav Wars are noted as having made territories "de facto and de jure monoethnic nation-states".

Monoethnic countries

CountryPopulationDominant group%
24,252,231Koreans99.9%
2,203,821Basotho99.7%
1,266,676Greek Cypriots98.8%
126,702,133Japanese98.5%
3,018,854Armenians98.1%
2,876,591Albanians98%
11,721,177Arabs98%
9,937,628Hungarians98%
162,951,560Bengalis98%
3,081,677Mongols97%
68,863,514Thai97%
38,523,261Poles96.9%
51,446,201Koreans96%
10,839,514Portuguese95.9%
23,603,049Han Taiwanese95%+
10,610,947Czechs95%
332,529Icelanders94%
5,537,364Finns93.5%
11,183,716Greeks93%
1,384,688,986Han Chinese91.6%
60,483,973Italians91.5%
4,227,746Croatians90.4%

Unrecognized states and dependent territories