BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY
African Australian
1st row: Anton Enus • Kofi Danning • Timomatic
2nd row: Waleed Aly • Liz Cambage • Dean Geyer 3rd row: Janine Murray • J. M. Coetzee • Heritier Lumumba | |
Total population | |
---|---|
248,605 (by country of birth, 2006); 2.51% of Australia's population (by ancestry, 2006)[1] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
All capital cities; predominantly Melbourne · Sydney · Perth | |
Languages | |
English · Afrikaans · Akan · Arabic · Dinka ·Ewe · Igbo · Mauritian Creole · Ndebele ·Shona · Swahili · Tigrinya · Yoruba · otherlanguages of Africa | |
Religion | |
predominantly Christianity; minority Islam | |
Related ethnic groups | |
other African people |
African Australians are Australian citizens and residents born in, or with recent ancestors from Africa.[2][3] Large-scale immigration from Africa to Australia is only a recent phenomenon, with Europe and Asia traditionally being the largest sources of migration to Australia. In 2005-06, permanent settler arrivals to Australia included 4,000 South Africans and 3,800 Sudanese, constituting the sixth and seventh largest sources of migrants, respectively.[4]
African Australians are of diverse cultural, linguistic, racial, religious, EDUCATIONAL, and employment backgrounds.[5] The Australian Bureau of Statistics classifies all residents into cultural and ethnic groups according to geographical origin, including the many Afrikaner migrants from Southern Africa in the Sub-Saharan region.[6]
African migrants may have come to Australia as skilled migrants, refugees, through family reunion, or as secondary migrants from other countries.[7] History[edit]
People from Africa, including those of Black African heritage, arrived in Australia with the First Fleet.[8][9]Migrants from Mauritius have been arriving in Australia since before federation in 1901. They came as convicts, prospectors who sought Victoria's goldfields, or skilled sugar workers who significantly helped to develop Queensland's sugar industry.[10]
The Special Commonwealth African Assistance Plan enabled students from Commonwealth African countries, including from Ghana, to travel to Australia during the mid-1960s. More than 70 per cent of those from West African countries remained in Australia following military coup d'états in their countries of birth.[11] Ultimately, however, immigration from Africa to Australia generally remained limited until the 1990's.
Demographics
Migration streams
The largest source of African immigrants in Australia come from South Africa and are largely of Afrikaner and British descent. Many migrants born in Zimbabwe left the country after major land reforms started in the 1980s by the Robert Mugabe government. Two thirds arrived after 2001, following economic uncertainty in their country of birth. Of the Zimbabwe-born migrants who moved to Australia, the largest proportion are of English (30.6%) ancestry, with some individuals of Scottish (7.3%) background present as well. More recent migration from Zimbabwe has included increasing numbers of Bantu people of Shona and Ndebele ethnicities.[12]
Other immigrants from Africa arrived via humanitarian PROGRAMS. In the 2011-2012 fiscal year, these individuals were mainly fromBurundi (44/79), Congo (143/158), the Democratic Republic of the Congo (370/454), Eritrea (244/294), Malawi (57/71), Rwanda (44/62), and Tanzania (40/67).[7]
Additionally, other immigrants from Africa arrived through a family migration stream. In the 2011-2012 fiscal year, these individuals were primarily from Ethiopia (412/802), Ghana (152/202), Guinea (33/62), Liberia (82/129), Sierra Leone (106/140), Somalia (164/420), Sudan(313/513), and Uganda (37/67).[7]
A significant number of African migrants have come to Australia through a skill migration stream. In the 2011-2012 fiscal year, these individuals were chiefly from Egypt (417/773), Kenya (188/415), Mauritius (228/303), Nigeria (126/250), South Africa (4,239/6,307),Zambia (35/115), and Zimbabwe (467/848).[7]
Some African immigrants have also arrived via a secondary migration from New Zealand, where they are citizens. In the 2011-2012 fiscal year, these New Zealand nationals were mainly originally from Libya (31/76).[7]
Across Australia's major cities, immigration from Africa is varied depending on country of origin. While Egyptian, Nigerian, and Ghanaian migrants overwhelmingly head for Sydney,[13][14][15] Mauritian and Sudanese migrant communities are largest in Melbourne.[10][16]
As of 2013, the Australian Special Broadcasting Service broadcasts in six new languages spoken by the growing migrant and refugee communities from Africa and Asia. Among these are Dinka of South Sudan, Swahili of Tanzania and the African Great Lakes region, andTigrinya of Eritrea and Ethiopia.[17]
Countries of birth
In the 2006 Australian Census, 248,605 residents declared that they were born in Africa.[1]
Country | Population | Main city and proportion who live there |
---|---|---|
South Africa | 104,128 | Sydney (27.3%) |
Egypt | 33,497 | Sydney (48.5%) |
Zimbabwe | 20,157 | Perth (24.7%) |
Sudan | 19,049 | Melbourne (31.0%) |
Mauritius | 18,175 | Melbourne (48.6%) |
Kenya | 9,940 | Perth (26.9%) |
Ethiopia | 5,633 | Melbourne (53.9%) |
Somalia | 4,316 | Melbourne (60.1%) |
Zambia | 4,082 | Perth (30.7%) |
Ghana | 2,771 | Sydney (51.0%) |
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