Personal Orientations towards Australian National Identity among British-born Residents
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-16, 15:01authored byPhillips, T, Holton, R
An area of long-standing interest in sociological studies of nationality and ethnicity has been the implications of widespread cross-border movements of peoples for cultural identity. One important stream of research has been concerned with peoples who have moved to a new country that is culturally different from their ‘‘homeland’’. Yet, far less attention has typically been given to those who shift to a country that is culturally alike. The study examines how peoples who have relocated from Great Britain to Australia feel about various ideas at the heart of contemporary debates about Australian national identity. Drawing on data from a 2001 survey of Australian national identity, analysis indicated that (i) British-born residents differ from the Australian-born in how their attitudes to key ideas about Australian national identity are ‘‘packaged’’ together, and (ii) among the British-born, views about Australian national identity vary across subgroups with different configurations of national pride.
History
Publication title
Ethnic and Racial Studies
Volume
27
Issue
5
Pagination
732-756
ISSN
0141-9870
Department/School
School of Social Sciences
Publisher
Routledge Journals
Place of publication
Oxford, UK
Rights statement
The definitive published version is available online at: http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals