sammy wrote:I'm beginning to sound like a broken gramophone record... but as this discussion is going round in circles anyway - would anyone know how many such returnees from Canada / US there are annually to Finland? My interest lies in finding out whether it is actually realistic to assume that any such great-great-grandsons (or daughters) would be aching to come here only on the grounds that it's allowed by the returnee policy? (unless they're abusive ba$tards like the guy you told us aboutdaryl wrote:...poor Canadian great great great grandson of a sonofabitch from Czarist Finland decides to drop everything and accept that dodgy job offer in the "old country")
I mean, what would be their motive...? If their parents and parents' parents (and their parents' parents' parents) have already lived in Canada / US all their lives, isn't that "home" so to speak? Erm... welcome, if you ask me, but... why? And that's the reason I'l like to know a bit about the annual returnee figures.
The information that you seek could be extracted by the Directorate of Immigration based on the notorious status code system that was used in association with the old Aliens Act. This would require cross-matching of citizenship of origin with the particular status code used on returnee residence permits.
You are welcome to ask them.

Statistics have generally been kept separately on returnees from the former USSR, so if you can cross-reference this with the total figures, then you'll get a result for the "rest of the world" category.
I don't know if you've seen Jouni Korkiasaari's estimate of the number of people who are eligible for privileges based on ancestry, but you'll find it here:
http://www.migrationinstitute.fi/db/stat/img/ff_01.gif
Come to think of it, Jouni may be willing to answer your question or to tell you who can. He seemed a nice, approachable guy when I met him some years ago.
http://www.migrationinstitute.fi/db/sta ... p?artid=18
Your remark about the motive of a returnee exposes the peculiar perversity of the expression "returnee" (and corresponding terms such as inkerinsuomalainen) that are used to describe this kind of immigration. The expression implies that it is possible to "return" to a place where you have never lived.
Ask yourself what, precisely, is returning when I go to the place in Belarus where my paternal grandmother was born (she left at the age of about 8 years, I have been told - and she died when I was still a baby). The only answer I can give you is "certain DNA patterns".
Motivation to "return"? None whatsoever. On the other hand, of course, if someone gives me a free pass to a bolthole somewhere out of reach of the long arm of the law, or a new base to set up nefarious activities, then I might be tempted to embark on a life of crime.

Look at this this way and you might see that the system is actually customised for the abusive ba$tards of whom you speak.
daryl