1301.0 - Year Book Australia, 2003  
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 24/01/2003   
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Contents >> Population >> Citizenship

Citizenship is a relatively recent concept for Australia as a nation, having its origins in the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 (Cwlth). Prior to this, Australians were British subjects. Since the inception of the Australian Citizenship Act on Australia Day in 1949, more than three million people born overseas have acquired Australian citizenship. For these people, citizenship is voluntary, expressing a commitment to the laws and principles of Australia, and respect for its land and its people. It confers the opportunity to participate more fully in Australian society, giving the right to vote, to apply for public office, and to hold an Australian passport and therefore leave and re-enter Australia freely.

Australian citizenship law and policy have been amended many times since their inception to reflect a more inclusive approach to the acquisition of Australian citizenship, with recent changes in policy towards creating more opportunities for young adults to acquire citizenship (Department of Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs 2001a). All migrants who meet set criteria are encouraged to become Australian citizens. Children acquire Australian citizenship at birth if at least one parent is an Australian citizen or a permanent resident of Australia.

The 2001 Census indicated that almost three-quarters (74%) of people born overseas who had been resident in Australia for two years or more were Australian citizens. There were high proportions of Australian citizens among people born in Greece (97%). However, this citizenship rate is influenced by the age and period of residence of people from Greece. For Australians born in Greece, most (83%) arrived in Australia in 1970 or earlier, and three-quarters are aged 50 years and over. The longer overseas-born people reside in Australia, and consequently the older they get, the more likely it is that they have acquired Australian citizenship.

Standardising gives the rates that would be expected if a given overseas-born population had the same profile of age and period of residence in Australia as the total overseas-born population (see table 5.48). Based on standardised rates, people born in the Philippines, Vietnam and China were the most likely to become Australian citizens. Unstable or changing political conditions in these countries may result in a greater desire for Australian citizenship than for people born in other countries.


5.48 CITIZENSHIP RATES, Overseas-born people resident in Australia for two years or more - 2001
Persons
Citizenship rate(a)
Standardised citizenship rate(b)
Selected birthplace
'000
%
%

Philippines
90.4
90.4
92.1
Vietnam
141.8
95.3
91.5
China (excludes SARs and Taiwan Province)
114.2
80.3
90.1
Greece
108.3
97.1
89.2
Italy
204.6
79.5
65.2
United Kingdom
951.5
65.6
64.3
Germany
100.5
76.5
59.7
Netherlands
78.7
78.3
55.5
New Zealand
281.5
37.7
45.3
Total overseas born(c)
3,560.3
74.4
74.4

(a) People for whom citizenship was not stated were excluded prior to the calculation of percentages.
(b) The rates of citizenship that would be expected if a given overseas-born population had the same age and period of residence profile as the total overseas-born population.
(c) Excludes people whose birthplace was not stated, inadequately described, not elsewhere classified or at sea.

Source: ABS data available on request, 2001 Census of Population and Housing.


In contrast, people born in the United Kingdom and New Zealand were less likely to be Australian citizens. This may be because 'the shared language, and strongly similar legal, political, and industrial arrangements of Australia and the other Anglo-American countries lead these immigrants to feel less need to make a choice of national identity' (Evans 1988).

Even though the proportion of Australian residents born in the United Kingdom who take up Australian citizenship is comparatively small, people born in the United Kingdom comprise the largest group of overseas-born in Australia. In keeping with this, British citizens were the largest group to be granted Australian citizenship in 2000-01 (see table 5.49). Former British, Irish and New Zealand citizens have been among the largest sources of Australian citizens since the early 1970s, when legislative changes and visa requirements prompted many Commonwealth citizens to apply for Australian citizenship. Other residents who were granted Australian citizenship in 2000-01 were likely to have come from Asian countries, such as Chinese, Vietnamese, Indian and Filipino nationals (together comprising 19% of citizenship grants), citizens of South Africa (4%) and Bosnia-Herzegovina (4%). These figures reflect immigration from these countries in recent years, with China, South Africa, India and the Philippines all in the top 10 birthplaces for overseas-born people who have arrived in Australia since 1996.


5.49 FORMER NATIONALITY,
People granted Australian citizenship - 2000-01
Country of former nationality or citizenship
no.
%

United Kingdom
12,474
17.3
New Zealand
11,007
15.3
China(a)
6,890
9.6
South Africa
2,992
4.2
Bosnia-Herzegovina
2,661
3.7
India
2,335
3.2
Philippines
2,211
3.1
Vietnam
1,953
2.7
Iraq
1,862
2.6
Sri Lanka
1,672
2.3
Fiji
1,398
1.9
Yugoslavia, Federal Republic of
1,175
1.6
Malaysia
1,057
1.5
United States of America(b)
1,004
1.4
Korea
966
1.3
Taiwan
894
1.2
Iran
827
1.1
Afghanistan
798
1.1
Croatia
767
1.1
Ireland
682
0.9
Somalia
667
0.9
Lebanon
665
0.9
Indonesia
659
0.9
Yugoslavia (former)
626
0.9
Canada
615
0.9
Turkey
591
0.8
Pakistan
556
0.8
Italy
534
0.7
Malta
478
0.7
Thailand
474
0.7
Cambodia
466
0.6
Russian Federation
415
0.6
Sudan
414
0.6
Singapore
387
0.5
Chile
323
0.4
Germany
321
0.4
Bangladesh
319
0.4
Portugal
318
0.4
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
317
0.4
Ukraine
284
0.4
Romania
259
0.4
Egypt
259
0.4
Other nationalities
5,332
7.4
Stateless
861
1.2
Not stated/other
305
0.4
Total
72,070
100.0

(a) People's Republic of China including citizens of Hong Kong and Macau SARs.
(b) Includes American Samoa.

Source: Department of Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs, 'Annual Report, 2000-2001'.



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