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Sydney’s CALD Communities in 2011: Using the Census Case studies: 2 local government areas (LGAs) – City of Sydney & Auburn City Council Established culturally.

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Presentation on theme: "Sydney’s CALD Communities in 2011: Using the Census Case studies: 2 local government areas (LGAs) – City of Sydney & Auburn City Council Established culturally."— Presentation transcript:

1 Sydney’s CALD Communities in 2011: Using the Census Case studies: 2 local government areas (LGAs) – City of Sydney & Auburn City Council Established culturally & linguistically diverse communities (CALD): -Speakers of Arabic (Auburn) and Cantonese (Sydney) Emerging CALD communities: - Speakers of Nepali (Auburn) and Thai (Sydney)

2 Note: Persons who did not state year of arrival were excluded from study

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5 Note: Households that did not stated their tenure or landlord type were excluded from study

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7 Ways to use/peruse ABS Census data Scales of difficulty: -Beginners: Census Spotlight, Quickstats, Community Profiles -Intermediate: Tablebuilder Basic, Tablebuilder Pro -Advanced: Statistical packages (IBM’s SPSS or freeware PSPP), mapping software (MapInfo)

8 RankLGA# of people from NESB % of people from NESB 1Auburn52,38271.0% 2Fairfield131,07569.8% 3Canterbury87,79363.9% 4Strathfield21,40860.8% 5Burwood19,18759.2% 6Bankstown99,79254.7% 16Blacktown111,17736.9% RELATIVE PROPORTIONS: Council areas ranked by their proportion of speakers of languages other than English (LOTE) 21City of Sydney50,68629.9% 41Blue Mountains3,8625.1%

9 ABSOLUTE VOLUMES: Council areas ranked according to number of people from non-English speaking backgrounds RankLGA# of people from NESB % of people from NESB 1Fairfield131,07569.8% 2Blacktown111,17736.9% 3Bankstown99,79254.7% 4Liverpool89,76249.8% 5Canterbury87,79363.9% 6Parramatta83,82850.2% 7Rockdale52,89954.3% 8Auburn52,38271.0% 9Sydney50,68629.9% 10Holroyd50,52451.0%

10 Languages Spoken at Home in the Greater Sydney region LanguageNumber of Persons% of Greater Sydney 1English2,732,44862.2% 2Arabic178,6654.1% 3Mandarin133,8893.05% 4Cantonese132,1363.01% 5Vietnamese85,0291.9% 6Greek80,7781.8% 7Italian68,5291.6% 8Hindi50,7851.2% 9Spanish49,8321.1% 10Korean46,1041.0% 11Tagalog34,3360.8% Greater Sydney’s population as at 9 August 2011 (Census night) = 4,391,673

11 Language # of arrivals 1991 - 2000 # of arrivals 2001-2011 Total Population % that arrived 2001- 2011 Shona 601,3381,56485.5% Nepali 1,26912,89315,54882.9% Gujarati 1,2309,21013,02170.7% Malayalam 5223,5065,01669.9% Hazaraghi 2501,5702,28668.7% Dinka 541,2351,80668.4% Telugu 1,0834,5016,67767.4% Afrikaans 8852,6654,49459.3% Marathi 7902,4674,23458.3% Punjabi 3,04410,49018,72456.0% Malay 2221,1472,06155.7% Bengali 4,19011,41220,57555.5% Thai 2,3636,86213,61150.4% Mandarin 27,75461,158133,88945.7% Urdu 2,9427,33616,81843.6% Year of Arrival in Australia for language groups across Greater Sydney

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13 Brian’s mapping slides Slide 1: Land use in CoS Slide 2: Thai speakers by Age in CoS Slide 3: Land use in Auburn Slide 4: Nepali speakers by Age in Auburn

14 Individual pre-tax income. Low Income: Negative income to $399 per week; Lower- Middle Income: $400 to $999 per week; Upper-Middle Income: $1,000 to $1,499 per week; High income: $1,500 to over $2,000 per week

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18 English proficiency – “how well do you speak English?”

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21 Limitations to the Census Incomplete data – prevalence of ‘not stated’ or ‘inadequately described’ in some categories. Eg. dwellings & income. Suspicion of Census & perceived confidentiality issues Subjective interpretation of questions Issues of equivalence between home country & Australia in education data eg. TAFE institutions

22 Drawing conclusions Cantonese speakers in City of Sydney: earlier migration, higher levels of home ownership, large presence across Greater Sydney (132K), substantial elderly population, higher incomes. Thai speakers in City of Sydney: very recent arrivals in rental properties, smaller presence in Greater Sydney (13K), >90% earn less than $1K per week. Arabic speakers in Auburn: gradual migration & very high proportion born here, combination of tenure types, younger population, 60% earning less than $400 per week. Nepali speakers in Auburn: very recent arrivals in rental properties, young adult population: 91% aged 20-39, lower income levels.

23 Alternative data sources - DIAC Visa type data: ie. skilled, family & humanitarian. Longitudinal Survey of Immigration in Australia (LSIA): three cohorts of migrants from 1993-1995, 1999-2000 and 2004-2005 Continuous Survey of Australian Migrants (CSAM): ongoing, currently surveying every 6 months Settlement Database: data from forms, migrant applications, Medicare.

24 CSAM Cohorts 1-5 (2009-2011) Employment outcomes by Visa stream (humanitarian visa not surveyed) Source: Smith, Kovac & Woods (2011), The Continuous Survey of Australian Migrants: Cohorts 1 – 5 Report (2009-11), DIAC: Canberra.

25 ReasonsCohort 1Cohort 2 Better employment opportunities22%27% To join family/relatives in Australia46%41% To get married19%15% To undertake studies8%9% Better future for family in Australia42%52% Other aspects, eg. lifestyle, climate36%50% Lack of employment in former country6%7% Dislike of economic conditions in former country13%17% Dislike of social conditions in former country14%16% Escape war or political situation16%12% Other4%8% LSIA data for Cohort 1 (1993-94) & Cohort 2 (1999-2000): Reasons for migrating to Australia (more than one reason could be given) Source: Richardson, Miller-Lewis et. al. (2002), The Settlement Experience of Migrants: A comparison of Wave One of LSIA 1 and LSIA 2, DIMIA: Canberra.


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