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Political Factors and Belonging

Sociology
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Political Factors and Belonging

Sociology
01 May 2026

Political Factors and Belonging in Multicultural Australia

Political factors — government policies, legislation, political rhetoric, and the decisions of political institutions — shape the structural conditions within which ethnic groups experience belonging and inclusion.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Political decisions create or dismantle the structural conditions for belonging. Anti-discrimination laws, multiculturalism policies, and inclusive political rhetoric enable belonging; restrictive immigration policies, political scapegoating, and the rollback of multicultural protections prevent it.

Political Factors That Enable Belonging

Multicultural Policy Framework

  • Australia’s official multiculturalism policy (various iterations since 1978) commits the government to cultural diversity, equal opportunity, and social cohesion
  • Funding for ethnic community organisations, language services, and multicultural education programmes
  • The Australian Multicultural Council provides advice to government on multicultural matters

Anti-Discrimination Legislation

  • Racial Discrimination Act 1975: prohibits discrimination on grounds of race, colour, national or ethnic origin; Section 18C prohibits public acts that racially vilify or intimidate
  • Anti-Discrimination Acts in states and territories: provide further protections
  • These laws signal that ethnic minority Australians have legal standing and that the state will protect them from discrimination

Citizenship and Permanent Residency

  • Pathways to citizenship include the right to vote, social services access, and a formal status of belonging
  • Humanitarian visa programmes bring refugees and asylum seekers; when well-supported, these programmes can facilitate inclusion

Political Recognition

  • When politicians from ethnic minority backgrounds are elected (e.g. Penny Wong — Malaysian-born; Andrew Giles — diverse ministerial appointments), it signals that Australia’s political community is genuinely diverse
  • Formal recognition of ethnic communities (e.g. parliamentary motions acknowledging significant cultural anniversaries)

Political Factors That Prevent Belonging

Exclusionary Political Rhetoric

  • Politicians who use ethnic or racial terminology to create fear (e.g. Howard government’s refugee “queue jumper” language; One Nation’s anti-Asian and anti-Muslim rhetoric)
  • Hansonism: Pauline Hanson’s 1996 maiden speech claimed Australia was “swamped by Asians”; her 2016 speech claimed Australia was “swamped by Muslims.” Such rhetoric contributes to discrimination and creates a hostile climate for ethnic Australians
  • Dog-whistle politics: coded language that signals ethnic hostility without explicit slurs

Immigration Policy

  • Mandatory detention and offshore processing (introduced by Howard, continued across governments) sends a message about who is welcome in Australia
  • Temporary Protection Visas (TPVs) deny permanent belonging to refugees, maintaining precarity
  • Delays in visa processing, expensive visa fees, and bureaucratic barriers limit family reunification and create uncertainty

Section 18C Debates

  • Periodic debates about repealing or weakening Section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act (e.g. the Abbott government’s proposal in 2014 to amend the law after the Andrew Bolt case)
  • These debates themselves send a message to ethnic minorities about whether they are protected or vulnerable
Political Factor Enables Belonging Prevents Belonging
Legislation RDA 1975; anti-discrimination law Proposals to weaken 18C
Policy Multiculturalism policy; funding for ethnic services Offshore detention; TPVs
Rhetoric Inclusive statements by PM; recognition of community events Hansonism; refugee demonisation
Representation Ethnic minority politicians Political exclusion; under-representation

APPLICATION: Political factors interact with media representations and responses to cultural practices. When politicians use anti-ethnic rhetoric, media amplifies it, and this shapes how the public responds to cultural practices. The sociological imagination helps us see this as a system, not a series of isolated events.

EXAM TIP: Know at least one Australian example of an enabling political factor and at least one preventing political factor. The Racial Discrimination Act and the One Nation movement are reliable, well-documented examples that examiners will recognise.

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