Jordan, Minnesota Statistic: Population, Charts, Map, Steets and More

In the middle of the Syrian conflict, Jordan City is the host for the largest number of refugees per capita. More than seven hundred thousand Syrian refugees have fled to the Jordanian capital, and another ninety thousand are not Syrian citizens. The refugees are spread out all over the country, but the majority live in the city of Amman. The city is also home to hundreds of thousands of displaced people and workers from other countries.

The main employment center in the city is the government. Hundreds of thousands of citizens work directly or indirectly for the government, which runs a number of industrial and commercial enterprises. However, the number of Westerners has decreased substantially. The city is now home to a small community of expatriates and an increasing number of Arab and European nationals. The population of the city consists of both locals and expatriates, as well as a few thousand Syrians and Iraqis.

The population of the country is dominated by Arabs, who constitute 95-97% of the population. Syrian refugees and Iraqi refugees have also migrated into the country in the past few years, making it the most populous Arab country in the world. Assyrian Christians, or Eastern Aramaic speaking Christians, make up 0.8% of the population, and there are also 5,000 Armenians and Kurds in Jordan, who are mostly refugees from Turkey.