Chapter 2 Multiculturalism—an overview
Introduction
2.1
Since its introduction in the 1970s Australia’s policy of
multiculturalism has shaped Australia’s identity and supported our development
as a multi-racial, harmonious and cohesive society.
2.2
While the concept of multiculturalism has been subject to debate and
review over time, Australia’s non-discriminatory migration system supports
cultural diversity. A commitment to multiculturalism to manage this diversity,
within the framework of Australian values and laws, has had the broad support
of Australian governments for over thirty years.[1]
2.3
This chapter provides a brief history of Australia’s multiculturalism
and the migration trends that define our cultural diversity. Following this the
chapter outlines the Government’s new multicultural policy framework, and surveys
responses to it, as an introduction to the detailed evaluation of evidence
received in the body of this report.
Our cultural diversity: a brief history
2.4
Australia is a multicultural nation with a strong record of peaceful
settlement of migrants from all parts of the world. Within the framework of our
inherited British legal and political system, cultural and linguistic diversity
remains an ever-present feature of our cultural and national life.
2.5
Ethnic, cultural and linguistic diversity has been a feature of
Australian society from the beginning of British colonisation in the eighteenth
century. Post settlement migration included Malays, Chinese, Japanese,
Filipinos and Afghans, as well as Irish, English, Scots and Germans. Prior to
this, the Malaccans and Melanesians had traded and periodically co‑located
over centuries with Indigenous Australians in the far north.[2]
2.6
The end of World War II triggered large scale migration across the
globe. While the foundations of the White Australia Policy were laid down in
1901, principally to prohibit importation of Pacific Island sugar workers,
Australia’s need for labour and an increased population led to the mass
settlement of displaced victims of Europe’s war.[3]
2.7
Since 1945 approximately seven million people from over 180 countries
have migrated to Australia. That is, around one million migrants each decade
since 1950.[4] Australia’s economy has
increased six-fold over that time.[5] Over the last decade
migrants from India, China, the Middle East and the African continent have
featured, contributing to Australia’s cultural, linguistic and religious
diversity.[6]
2.8
At 2010, Australia was one of the world’s top three culturally diverse
nations.[7] When Australians with one
or both parents born overseas are included nearly 45 per cent of the population
has a close overseas connection. Today, over 260 languages are spoken in
Australia, by people of 270 different ancestries.[8]
Census data shows that more than half of recent arrivals since 2006 speak both
another language and English either very well or well.[9]
This language diversity gives Australia a competitive edge in an increasingly
transnational world.[10]
2.9
Despite this great cultural diversity, Australia remains a predominately
Christian and secular community, with the largest minority religion being
practiced by roughly two per cent of the population.[11] At the 2006 census, 63.9 per cent of
Australians indicated that they were Christian, around 20 per cent had no
religion or did not specify a religion, and the remaining held non-Christian religious
beliefs, of which the largest proportion were Buddhist at 2.1 per cent and
Muslim 1.7 per cent.[12]
The foundations of Australian multicultural policy
2.10
Australia has an enduring history as a successful and productive multi‑racial
community. What has changed over decades has not been the fact of Australia’s
population diversity but the different policy frameworks developed by
government to develop and interpret that diversity. DIAC states:
…[M]ulticulturalism is a coordinated long range response to
migration patterns that have resulted in diverse people and cultures occupying
the same locality, who share the aim of making a home for themselves and their
families in a community within a safe, stable and cohesive nation. Over time
the term …has come to refer to: the demographic fact of cultural diversity; a
set of policies, programs and services; as well as a concept that articulates
normative ideals about society.[13]
2.11
Australia’s first national policy of multiculturalism followed the
recommendations of the Galbally Report (1978). The report was compiled for the
Fraser Government as part of its review of migrant services and programs.[14]
Key principles enunciated in the report were:
- all members of
society are to have equal opportunity to realise their potential and have equal
access to programs and services;
- every person to be
able to retain his or her culture without prejudice or disadvantage and be
encouraged to embrace and understand other cultures;
- migrants’ needs are
to be met by mainstream services, but special services and programs are to be
in place at first; and
- there be full
consultation with clients in design and operation of services with a focus on
migrants becoming self-reliant quickly.[15]
2.12
The policy represented a distinct shift away from the assimilation
approach which had dominated in the 1940s and 1950s.[16]
Assimilation demanded surrender of language and cultural heritage and a fast
integration into mainstream society. The new cultural policy recognised that
migrants could retain their cultural identity and successfully integrate with
support over time.[17]
2.13
The abolition of the White Australia Policy in 1973 paved the way for
the legislative foundations of the multicultural policy enacted under the
Commonwealth Racial Discrimination Act (RDA) in 1975. The RDA responded
in particular to obligations under the International Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD) which was
ratified by Australia in September that year.[18]
2.14
Governments in the 1980s and 1990s established advisory councils to
assist migrants settle well and also broadened policies to support family
reunion, cultural expression, social harmony and social justice.[19]
By the mid 1990s, however, this rights-based emphasis lost favour. Government
policy emphasised skilled migration and structural reforms saw research
capacity reduced and service provision mainstreamed.[20]
2.15
Nevertheless, national policy frameworks continued to be guided by the
fundamentals set out in Galbally report.[21] Those practical elements have consistently
included English language tuition, settlement services, and an explicit policy
of equal access to government services.[22]
2.16
Every State and Territory has now adopted the policy of
multiculturalism. In particular, South Australia, Victoria and NSW have
introduced explicit multicultural and community relations legislation.[23]
These statutes do not provide for individual rights, but provide a framework
for a whole of government commitment to multiculturalism that includes equality
of access, the promotion of full participation, and the promotion of inter‑cultural
understanding.
2.17
In contrast to many other countries, Australia has also promoted permanent
settlement and access to citizenship as a central plank of an integrative
multiculturalism from early days. In 1949, during the inaugural year of the Nationality
and Citizenship Act 1948, Australian citizenship was granted to 2 493
people from just over 35 different nationalities.[24]
2.18
In 2011–12, the total number of people conferred citizenship in
Australia was 95 776, up from 85 916 in 2010-11.[25]
Australia now has one of the highest take up rates of citizenship among
Organisation for Economic Co‑operation and Development (OECD) countries,
with nearly 80 per cent of the Australian population being citizens.[26]
The recent migration context
2.19
While the Committee’s purpose is not
to review Australia’s migration policy, any evaluation of the commitment to
multicultural policy has to start with the fact of cultural diversity, and the
policies that form its make‑up.[27]
2.20
As previously noted, Australia has a non-discriminatory migration policy
which does not select by country or race but according to criteria determined
by government policy and objectives. The two main migration programs are:
- the Migration Program
(formerly the General Skilled migration Program), comprising the points tested
skilled stream, the employer sponsored and business streams, and the family
migration stream, and
- the Humanitarian
Migration program, comprising onshore and offshore humanitarian and refugee
streams.[28]
2.21
Of these, the General Migration Program has by far the largest visa
intake in Australia. During 2011-12, a
total of 184 998 entrants came in under this stream;
68 per cent as skilled migrants and 31.7 per cent as family members. By
contrast, only 13 759 visas were issued to humanitarian
entrants, with 6 718 visas being granted offshore and 7 041 visas onshore.[29]
2.22
Table 2.1 shows the top ten source countries, by citizenship, for
the Migration Program in 2011–12.
Table 2.1 Migration Program top ten source countries, by
citizenship, for 2011–2012+
Country of citizenship
|
Total
|
India
|
29 018
|
Peoples Republic of China
|
25 509
|
United Kingdom
|
25 274
|
Philippines
|
12 933
|
South Africa
|
7 640
|
Sri Lanka
|
5 577
|
Malaysia
|
5 508
|
Irish Republic
|
4 938
|
South Korea
|
4 874
|
Vietnam
|
4 773
|
+ Excluding New
Zealand, the largest source, which is not counted in migration data
Source DIAC,
2011–12 Migration Program Report, Program Year to 30 June 2012, p. 5.
2.23
As shown in the table, India became the top source country during the
period, representing 17.7 per cent of the total migration program. Migration
intake from China, the leading source in 2010–11, decreased by 13.8 per cent.
By contrast, intake from the United Kingdom (UK) increased by 13.7 per cent.[30]
2.24
DIAC has advised that skilled migration will now be more efficient and
demand driven, following implementation of a new skills points test framework
in July 2011, the introduction of the SkillsSelect database in July 2012, and
the simplification of the skilled visa framework.[31]
2.25
Table 2.2 shows the fluctuation in skilled migration trends by
source citizenship country over the period 2009–12.
Table 2.2 Point tested skilled migration top ten
nationalities: trends over 2009–12
Country of citizenship
|
2009-10
|
20010-11
|
2011-12
|
Percentage
Change
|
India
|
13 330
|
12 730
|
17 030
|
33.7%
|
United Kingdom
|
8 740
|
8 380
|
9 820
|
17.2%
|
Peoples Republic of China
|
5 700
|
12 160
|
7 900
|
-35.1%
|
Sri Lanka
|
3 530
|
3 240
|
3 900
|
20.2%
|
Malaysia
|
3 410
|
3 030
|
3 620
|
19.4%
|
South Africa
|
4 490
|
2 760
|
3 020
|
9.4%
|
Pakistan
|
1 010
|
990
|
2 810
|
183.3%
|
Philippines
|
2 320
|
1 750
|
2 470
|
41.4%
|
Iran
|
1 470
|
1380
|
2 390
|
73.2%
|
Bangladesh
|
1 460
|
1 240
|
1 730
|
39.5%
|
Source DIAC,
Annual
Report 2011–12: Outcome 1, Table 7, p. 70.
2.26
In the wake of significant conflict and destabilisation in three key
regions of the world, the main sources of humanitarian entrants in Australia
over 2010–2012 were the Middle East and South West Asia, Asia and Africa.[32]
During 2011–12 the main groups resettled from these regions were:
- Middle East/South
West Asia—Iraqi minorities from a range of countries in the Middle East, and
Afghans from Iran and Pakistan;
- Asia—Burmese refugees
from camps along the Thai-Burma border, as well as from Malaysia and India,
Burmese Rohingya from Bangladesh and Bhutanese refugees from Nepal; and
- Africa—refugees from
the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopians and Eritreans.[33]
2.27
A focus of concern in recent political debate has been the evident rise
in ‘irregular maritime arrivals’ (IMAs). Data from DIAC indicates an increase
in numbers to 8 371 over 2011–12, compared to 4 910 during 2010–11. Of the 7
041 humanitarian visas granted onshore, 68 per cent were for IMAs. The top
three source countries for IMAs granted Protection Visas in 2011‑12 (in descending
order) were Afghanistan, Iran and Iraq.[34]
2.28
Australia’s settlement of humanitarian entrants is comparable with the
United States (US) and Canada, providing for permanent settlement and
citizenship for a pre-determined number of humanitarian entrants. This
contrasts with the situation in Europe where the majority of asylum seekers
stay on under subsidiary or temporary protection arrangements. In 2010, almost
three quarters of the world’s asylum seekers went to Europe, with France and
Germany receiving a total of 91 000 refugee requests over 2010–11.[35]
2.29
While numbers from the UK have recently increased, Australia now
receives more skilled migrants from India, China, the Middle East and West or
South Asia and more refugees from Africa, Asia and the Middle East than Europe,
which was the top source region prior to 2001.[36] This global trend
reflects the change in the migration environment where skill markets are now
international and both rich and poor are more mobile than they have been in the
past.[37]
2.30
Within this context, Australia’s migration policies are designed to
attract the best skilled migrants to fill labour shortages, to build business
synergies, to boost our population, as well as to meet human rights obligations
under international covenants to which Australia is a signatory. The numbers
accepted depend on annually adjusted quotas set by DIAC in response to changing
global and domestic trends and needs.[38]
2.31
As DIAC advised, migration contributes growth to the three components of
real GDP identified in the Department of Treasury intergenerational reports,
being: Population, Participation and Productivity.[39] Skilled professionals and humanitarian
families tend to be younger, which increases the population and diversifies the
economy.[40]
2.32
The OECD ‘International Migration Outlook 2012 has recently concluded
that Australia has been successful compared with other OECD countries in
utilising migration policy to meet its social and economic objectives in a time
of global recession.[41] The OECD has also noted
the release in May 2011 of Australia’s first Population Strategy, which
emphasised the role of migration in supporting regional growth.[42]
2.33
Australia is thus seen to be in a stronger position to address the
challenges of population ageing to be experienced by other advanced economies
over the coming decade..[43]
Restating multiculturalism: the People of Australia
2.34
On 17 February 2011, the Hon. Chris Bowen MP, Minister for Immigration
and Citizenship, launched the Government’s new multicultural policy The
People of Australia.[44] The policy responds to
recommendations made by the Australian Multicultural Advisory Council (AMAC) in
its 2010 report of the same name.[45]
2.35
The Government established the AMAC in 2008 to formulate appropriate
policy responses to Australia’s cultural diversity in the new international
migration context. The Council had a finite life,[46]
with the objective of advising on:
- social cohesion
issues relating to Australia's cultural and religious diversity
- overcoming
intolerance and racism in Australia
- communicating the
social and economic benefits of Australia's cultural diversity to the broad
community
- issues relating to
the social and civic participation of migrants in Australian society.[47]
2.36
According to DIAC, the new multicultural policy framework provides for
respect for cultural diversity and a commitment to democratic principles and
Australian laws:
Australia’s successful multicultural society and democracy
are built around shared rights and responsibilities that are fundamental to
living in Australia, as broadly enshrined in the citizenship pledge.[48]
2.37
The four principles of the new multicultural policy are that the
Australian Government:
- celebrates and values
the benefits of cultural diversity for all Australians, within the broader aims
of national unity, community harmony and maintenance of Australia’s democratic
values;
- is committed to a
just, inclusive and socially cohesive society where everyone can participate in
the opportunities that Australia offers and where government services are
responsive to the needs of Australians from culturally and linguistically
diverse backgrounds;
- welcomes the
economic, trade and investment benefits which arise from our successful
multicultural nation; and
- will act to promote
understanding and acceptance while responding to expression of intolerance and
discrimination with strength, and where necessary, with the force of the law.[49]
2.38
Key initiatives to promote the new multicultural agenda, include:
- establishing a new
Australian Multicultural Council (AMC) with a broader terms of reference than
the AMAC to oversee and monitor policy implementation, manage Harmony Day and
cultural diversity celebrations, and implement the ‘multicultural ambassadors’ program;
- strengthen the
Government’s Access and Equity Strategy under management of the AMC to improve
the strategy’s reporting structures and the responsiveness of government
services to clients disadvantaged by cultural and linguistic barriers and to
work across governments to collate relevant data on diversity;
- establishing a new
National Anti-Racism Partnership and Strategy between key government agencies
to build expertise on anti -racism, communication strategies to address
discrimination and support community leadership; and
- prioritising
Multicultural Arts and Festivals grants funding under the Diversity and Social
Cohesion Program, and establishing a Multicultural Youth Sports Partnership
Program to involve youth from new and emerging communities.[50]
Support for the policy framework
2.39
Evidence received by the Committee indicated strong overall support for
the new multicultural policy among migration experts and government and
non-government service providers.[51]
2.40
Queensland’s leading migrant settlement agency, the Multicultural
Development Association (MDA), for example, commended the policy as a ‘deliberate
and conscious strategy’ to maximise benefits for all Australians, observing:
Australian multiculturalism is a source of strength,
opportunity and unity. It has never been about cementing divisions between
people but rather galvanising the whole community to work together to promote
the fundamental principles and values of our shared Australian society and our
inclusive citizenship: respect for the rule of law, democracy, freedom,
justice, unity, equality, opportunity, gender equity, the right to participate,
tolerance….[52]
2.41
Professor Andrew Jakubowicz, Cosmopolitan Civil Societies Research
Centre, Sydney University of Technology, was among those welcoming the new
policy as a timely re-statement and refocussing of core principles of the
Galbally report. He observed:
…over the past thirty-five years globalisation has
intensified, the Internet has been created, and population movements have
accelerated. New communities have entered Australian society and struggled to
find a place here. Australia’s philosophical and policy settings have not kept
pace. Indeed the
failure to regularly refresh the ideas and practices from a solid empirical
research base, with a consequential tendency to abandon the debate purely to
the realm of emotion and populist pressure groups, has contributed to both
social and policy crises.[53]
2.42
The proposed appointment of the Australian Multicultural Council (AMC)
to conduct research, monitor and co-ordinate policy implementation measures was
generally seen as an advance in this context.[54] There was also support
for the body as an independent agency at arms’ length from government. In
particular, the AMAC commended the Government for its decision to have Council
members appointed by an independent panel, along the lines of the Australian
Broadcasting Commission (ABC) and Special Broadcasting Services (SBS).[55]
2.43
Eminent migration historian Dr James
Jupp AM, a member of the first Multicultural Advisory Council, saw value in
appointment of an independent statutory body answerable to the Prime Minister
and separate from DIAC to oversee multicultural policy. However, he also
considered that the body should be fully staffed and funded along the lines of
the former Office of Multicultural Affairs if it is to be effective in its
mandate.[56]
2.44
There was otherwise strong support
for the AMC’s role in monitoring the Access and Equity Strategy, which aligns
with the objectives of the Government’s Social Inclusion Agenda and its focus
on ensuring full participation and opportunities for all. Arts and youth
initiatives had wide support in this context.[57]
2.45
A number of submitters, however, felt the synergies between the
Government’s multicultural policy and its Social Inclusion Agenda were
underdeveloped, and that there is a need to better target people from
culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) backgrounds directly by more
co-ordinated action.[58]
2.46
A consistent theme was the need to establish cultural indicators to
better direct policy for this purpose under the Access and Equity Strategy:
The issue of the social inclusion of CaLD communities will be
considerably aided by proper process of access and equity. Before this can
occur there needs to be auditing, benchmarking and establishing some form of
compliance to meet basic human rights standards, especially those pertaining to
cultural diversity; freedom of religion, belief and non-belief; education
(especially the higher education sector which has largely failed to keep
abreast of social, cultural, demographic and intellectual changes, both locally
and internationally); language; heritage; the equitable allocation of
resources, and substantive equality – all essential but long overdue and neglected
in Australia.[59]
2.47
Research issues are discussed in more detail in Chapter 7 of this
report.
2.48
While the range of views outlined were generally supportive of
multiculturalism as a policy there was, however, a pronounced point of
disagreement in the evidence. This was over the development of anti‑racism
measures as part of the social justice framework supporting multiculturalism.
2.49
Where advocates for the Government’s multicultural policy saw an overt
anti-racism stance as fundamental for building community tolerance and social
cohesion,[60] a substantial body of
submitters to the inquiry challenged the rights-based framework that supports
multiculturalism, and particularly the anti-racism stance that underpins it.
2.50
This aspect of the inquiry raised complex issues about multiculturalism
as a social philosophy as well a social policy construct. This is discussed in
greater detail in the following chapter on Australia’s anti-racism framework
and multiculturalism.
Conclusion
2.51
In the Committee’s opinion, multiculturalism is an indisputable success
story for Australia. The policy has contributed to the transformation of
Australia from a small, insular community with a colonial mindset to a
sophisticated and cosmopolitan nation that can engage with the region and the
world on its own terms.
2.52
For over forty years the policy of multiculturalism has given effect to
an ameliorating vision of social harmony, and one which delivers practical
commitments to respect difference but invites social inclusion.
2.53
The Committee is strongly committed to that vision, believing that all
Australians are entitled to benefit from our cultural diversity. However, it
also acknowledges that the effectiveness of multicultural policy has been
called into question in the wake of the terrorist attacks of September 2001,
and events in Europe and Bali. The Committee has, as a consequence, received a
large number of submissions focussing on what is perceived as a direct threat
to Australian values by migration from Islamic countries.
2.54
Given these developments, the Committee supports the Government’s
decision to restate and clarify the purpose and distinct principles of
Australia’s multicultural policy. In the Committee’s opinion, the message
conveyed should be that multiculturalism is an inclusive policy which values
and respects diversity and promotes inclusiveness and engagement within
the framework of Australian laws.
2.55
This emphasis reiterates a guiding principle of the Galbally report’s
first articulation of multiculturalism, being that:
…every person should be able to retain his or her culture
without prejudice or disadvantage and be encouraged to embrace and understand
other cultures.[61]
Recommendation 1 |
2.56 |
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
endorse and reaffirm commitment to the Galbally report’s vision of
multiculturalism as an inclusive policy which respects diversity and fosters
engagement with Australian values, identity and citizenship, within the
framework of Australian laws. |
2.57
The Committee also believes that balance is required when considering
debate about multicultural policy in the context of recent migration trends.
2.58
Currently, members of the Islamic faith comprise less than two per cent
of the total population. Other than those born in Australia most arrivals fill
skill shortages; others arrive as vulnerable refugees. As set out in this
chapter, Australia receives a very small number of humanitarian entrants and
refugees compared with Europe and, in contrast to arrangements there, has a
well-developed settlement program which works for social inclusion.
2.59
Discussion of racism is unpalatable in Australia but evidence to the
Committee generated a large and impassioned debate about its manifestation, or
otherwise, in the context of these developments. This is explored in the next
chapter which looks at Australia’s race discrimination framework and its
interaction with multicultural policy. The discussion of Islam within
Australia’s religious diversity is addressed in the chapter following.