Australia is one of the most ethnically diverse nations in the world. This diversity is the product of successive waves of migration, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander presence as the original inhabitants, and deliberate multicultural policies since the 1970s.
KEY TAKEAWAY: By most global comparisons, Australia has a higher proportion of overseas-born residents and a more linguistically and ethnically diverse population than most comparable nations. This diversity is a defining social fact of contemporary Australia.
| Country | Overseas-born % (approx.) | Key Characteristic |
|---|---|---|
| Australia | ~29% | One of world’s highest overseas-born proportions |
| Canada | ~23% | Federal multiculturalism policy; strong immigration intake |
| United States | ~14% | Large immigrant population but lower % than Australia |
| United Kingdom | ~14% | Post-colonial immigration; Brexit context |
| Japan | ~2% | Historically low immigration; homogeneous policy |
| Germany | ~18% | Guest worker history; significant Turkish community |
EXAM TIP: VCAA requires you to compare Australia’s ethnic diversity with other countries. Know at least two comparison countries and one specific statistic for each. Canada is a useful comparison (federal multiculturalism policy, high immigration); Japan is useful as a contrast (historically low immigration, homogeneous population policy).
Australia’s model differs from other diverse nations in several ways:
- Federal multiculturalism policy: Unlike the US (which has no formal multiculturalism policy), Australia has an official Multicultural Policy framework
- Points-based immigration: Like Canada, Australia uses a skills-based immigration system rather than the US family-based system
- High proportion of recent arrivals: Unlike the UK or Germany, where significant immigration began post-WWII, Australia has had continuous high immigration throughout its modern history
VCAA FOCUS: The comparative perspective methodology is explicitly named in the study design. Practise framing Australia’s diversity in relation to at least two other countries. Use specific statistics, not just general claims about “high diversity.”