loquasagacious
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That's because they want to be united on their own terms eg everyone assimilated into their culture.
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National...in-Sydney-study/2004/12/29/1103996615042.htmlsmh said:Sydney is not divided by race and it does not have entrenched, ethnic ghettoes. Rather, a study has found, the city is a remarkable example of an urban racial melting pot when compared with other parts of the world.
While new migrants, particularly refugees, converged in areas with cheaper housing, the study found their children and grandchildren often moved on to other suburbs, reducing the chance of racial enclaves becoming entrenched.
The paper, by Macquarie University geographer Michael Poulsen and University of Bristol academics Ron Johnston and James Forrest, counters arguments that Sydney is becoming divided by race.
A study by the Centre for Population and Urban Research's Bob Birrell and Ernest Healy last year identified two, separate Sydneys. One was typified by low-income migrants in the west and south-west, while the other covered rich inner suburbs and "aspirational areas" on the city fringe. It said Australian-born residents were moving from west and south-west Sydney faster than migrants, who were continuing to settle "disproportionately" in these areas. But Dr Poulsen's paper, published in the latest issue of Australian Geographical Studies, argues that having high numbers of migrants in poor suburbs is nothing new, and does not lead to ethnic groups being trapped in American-style ghettoes. "There are places like Cabramatta that have a very high proportion of one ethnic group, but ... the level of concentration of ethnic groups is nothing like what you find in the US," he said.
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"Given the mix of people coming in, and given the way housing is brought, we won't end up with those ghettoes."
That is good, he says, because "when you get a concentration of population, incomes go down and a huge amount of money has to go in to support those areas".
Sydney's racial mix has drastically changed over the last half-century, with those claiming Anglo-Celtic ancestry falling from 96 per cent in the 1947 census to 64 per cent in the latest census, in 2001.
While Cabramatta has a high proportion of Vietnamese immigrants, other suburbs famous for their ethnic identities, such as Leichhardt, or Little Italy, have comparatively low concentrations of ethnic groups.
That is partly because migrants, their children and grandchildren, have tended not to stay in areas alongside others from their homelands, and partly because immigrants now come from a far wider range of countries.
"For the great majority, less than 20 per cent live in areas where their co-ethnics form even 20 per cent of the population," the paper said. "There is little, if any, evidence here of a city divided between ethnic and [Anglo-Celtic] fragments."
It says the only difference between the past three decades of immigration and the previous White Australia policy, is that recent migrants are more visible.
"The primary feature of Sydney's ethnic population to emerge from this study is one of residential mixing, not of segregation," it says.
Ok so does it seem possible that the rest of the world can become like australia?addymac said:This seems to offer some hope of mixing and multi-culturalism:
http://www.smh.com.au/news/National...in-Sydney-study/2004/12/29/1103996615042.html