ABS Ancestry [online]. 2012. Dostupné online.Je zde použita šablona {{Cite web}} označená jako k „pouze dočasnému použití“.
archive.today
Data Access and Dissemination Systems (DADS). American FactFinder – Results [online]. [cit. 2021-01-20]. Dostupné v archivu pořízeném dne 14 February 2020.Je zde použita šablona {{Cite web}} označená jako k „pouze dočasnému použití“.
books.google.com
COLE, Jeffrey E. Ethnic Groups of Europe: An Encyclopedia: An Encyclopedia. [s.l.]: ABC-CLIO, 25 May 2011. Dostupné online. ISBN1598843036. S. 110.Je zde použita šablona {{Cite book}} označená jako k „pouze dočasnému použití“.
GLASSMAN, Ronald M.; SWATOS, William H.; DENISON, Barbara J. Social Problems in Global Perspective. [s.l.]: University Press of America, 1 January 2004. Dostupné online. ISBN0761829334. S. 348.Je zde použita šablona {{Cite book}} označená jako k „pouze dočasnému použití“.
MINAHAN, James. One Europe, Many Nations: A Historical Dictionary of European National Groups. [s.l.]: Greenwood Publishing Group, 1 January 2000. Dostupné online. ISBN0313309841. S. 222.Je zde použita šablona {{Cite book}} označená jako k „pouze dočasnému použití“.
In the 1950s (the peak of traditional emigration) about 350,000 people left the Netherlands, mainly to Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the United States and South Africa. About one-fifth returned. The maximum Dutch-born emigrant stock for the 1950s is about 300,000 (some have died since). The maximum emigrant stock (Dutch-born) for the period after 1960 is 1.6 million. Discounting pre-1950 emigrants (who would be about 85 or older), at most around 2 million people born in the Netherlands are now living outside the country. Combined with the 13,1 million ethnically Dutch inhabitants of the Netherlands, there are about 16 million people who are Dutch, in a minimally accepted sense. Autochtone population at 1 January 2006, Central Statistics Bureau, Integratiekaart 2006, (external link)Archivováno 19. 1. 2016 na Wayback Machine. (nizozemsky)
statcan.gc.ca
www12.statcan.gc.ca
Immigration and Ethnocultural Diversity Highlight Tables [online]. statcan.gc.ca, 25 October 2017. Dostupné online.Je zde použita šablona {{Cite web}} označená jako k „pouze dočasnému použití“.
unpo.org
"Afrikaners constitute nearly three million out of approximately 53 million inhabitants of the Republic of South Africa, plus as many as half a million in diaspora."Afrikaner – Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
web.archive.org
In the 1950s (the peak of traditional emigration) about 350,000 people left the Netherlands, mainly to Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the United States and South Africa. About one-fifth returned. The maximum Dutch-born emigrant stock for the 1950s is about 300,000 (some have died since). The maximum emigrant stock (Dutch-born) for the period after 1960 is 1.6 million. Discounting pre-1950 emigrants (who would be about 85 or older), at most around 2 million people born in the Netherlands are now living outside the country. Combined with the 13,1 million ethnically Dutch inhabitants of the Netherlands, there are about 16 million people who are Dutch, in a minimally accepted sense. Autochtone population at 1 January 2006, Central Statistics Bureau, Integratiekaart 2006, (external link)Archivováno 19. 1. 2016 na Wayback Machine. (nizozemsky)