There is only a very small percentage of people who apply for citizenship and post in this forum. If you started trying to collect data you would have insane levels of sampling bias. So you wouldn't get any useful data out of it.ottawa-pr said:I had the idea that maybe we should look at processing times based on the region you come from to see whether they might be significant differences between, say Western Europe and Middle East.
Not a scientific survey, I was thinking more along the way Imran01 has done in terms of monthly breakdowns. It would give you some sense of what is going on.spyfy said:There is only a very small percentage of people who apply for citizenship and post in this forum. If you started trying to collect data you would have insane levels of sampling bias. So you wouldn't get any useful data out of it.
Again, those breakdowns would be meaningless. It tells you nothing if you have a sample of fifty people and then see that people from country A need longer to be processed. It would be completely random that you see something in that data.ottawa-pr said:Not a scientific survey, I was thinking more along the way Imran01 has done in terms of monthly breakdowns. It would give you some sense of what is going on.
But that is not surprising since there is a lot of variation among Eastern European countries: Belarus (Russian vassal), Ukraine (pro-west), Moldova (riddled with corruption), Romania & Bulgaria (EU member states). So my guess would be that someone from Bulgaria is processed much faster than someone from Belarus.skekk said:Me and my friends from Eastern Europe (non schengen) have very different timelines. It differs from 4 months to 13 months with new rules since June 2015.
Can you explain how people on this site are a biased sample? In what way do you think the users here deviate from the average person? Are they more likely to have non-routine applications? That is an easy fix as the criteria for an application being non-routine are pretty straight forward. Are they more likely to be more educated? What is the bias?spyfy said:And "even" if you have fifty people, selection biased in this forum, that wouldn't change the judgement.
That is easily fixed by looking at regions (this is my first on the spot try, maybe you could divide them a bit furtherspyfy said:Imagine you have one guy from country A and it takes 8 months
And you have one guy from country B and it takes 4 months
Would you now claim that country A generally moves slower? No, of course not.
I wanted to say the opposite. People from same type (non schengen which is non EU) countries has different stories. I am convinced that it depends on personal history.ottawa-pr said:But that is not surprising since there is a lot of variation among Eastern European countries: Belarus (Russian vassal), Ukraine (pro-west), Moldova (riddled with corruption), Romania & Bulgaria (EU member states). So my guess would be that someone from Bulgaria is processed much faster than someone from Belarus.