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The impact of immigration on the Australian economyFell, Gordon January 1991 (has links)
Australian immigration policy has traditionally been justified as a means to ensure national security and promote economic development. Neither of these rationales retains much contemporary force. A larger population is no longer regarded as critical to Australia's defensive capacity, and the quest for economic development, synonymous with aggregate growth, has been superseded by a concern about per capita growth performance. While humanitarian and cultural justifications for immigration have been advanced, they are either restricted in scope or contentious. Currently, the programme is operating on a large scale without a clear rationale. The purpose of this work is to investigate the economic consequences of immigration, and so consider whether the economic rationale may be recast in an alternative form. In this chapter, the existing literature is reviewed and a strategy for carrying the analysis further is outlined.
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Containerdeutsche : contemporary German immigration to Australia and CanadaRadermacher, Ulrike January 1991 (has links)
This thesis is a comparative study of contemporary German migration to Australia and Canada, specifically to Sydney and Vancouver. It explores the dynamics of the migration process from a phenomenological point of view. All events and circumstances in the migration process are seen as interrelated, and therefore important to the analysis. Furthermore, the meaning of a phenomenon can only be understood by exploring its context. Therefore, this study views contemporary German migration in its various contexts—how it is displayed in the social science literature and manifested in government statistics, how it is presented as common sense, and how it is experienced by the migrants themselves. Thus, the phenomenological approach attempts to be holistic.
Using the phenomenologic-hermeneutic paradigm the thesis focuses on the subjective experiences of individuals; in terms of migrants' understanding of their own motivations, migration decisions, and the process of adjustment, and in terms of their understanding of other contemporary German migration experience.
The study examines the migration narratives of a sample of thirty Germans who have migrated, or are at some stage of the process of migrating, to either Australia or Canada over the last twenty-five years. The specific analysis and interpretation of these accounts are based on the hermeneutic philosophy of meaning and discourse. The sample interviews reveal two levels of conceptualization in the subjects' accounts. At one level all migrants talk in a way that can be characterized as representing "common knowledge". On another level, the interviewees interpret their own personal motivations and experiences in a way which does not correspond to common knowledge. Interviewees commonly described the Neueinwanderer (new immigrant) as wealthy, arrogant business migrants, but none of the interviewees described themselves in those terms. In
Australia it was commonly thought that Neueinwanderer have a difficult adjustment time, but most personal narratives related positive adjustment experiences. In Canada all interviewees believed that German immigrants had no great adjustment difficulties.
The major finding of this thesis is that the conventional notions of linearity and finality with respect to migration need to be re-evaluated in the social science literature, government policies and common sense. The phenomenologic discussion reveals that modern migration, at least for certain groups to certain countries, is not a linear, discrete and final process. Instead, this thesis argues that migration is best seen as a comprehensive, recursive process of decision making, action (legal application and geographic move) and adaptation to a new environment. / Arts, Faculty of / Anthropology, Department of / Graduate
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British migration to Australia, 1860-1914 : a descriptive, analytical and statistical account of the immigration from the United KingdomCrowley, Francis Keble January 1951 (has links)
No description available.
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Blooding a lion in Little Bourke Street : the creation, negotiation and maintenance of Chinese ethnic identity in MelbourneChooi, Cheng Yeen. January 1986 (has links) (PDF)
Bibliography: leaves 311-328.
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Who do they think they are?: Constructing Australian immigration in letters to the editor since 1966McCormack, Paul Joseph Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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Who do they think they are?: Constructing Australian immigration in letters to the editor since 1966McCormack, Paul Joseph Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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The Jewish Community In New South Wales 1914-1939Rutland, Suzanne D. January 1990 (has links)
Master of Arts / N/A
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Government-sponsored immigration into South Australia 1872-86Bray, Kenneth W. A. January 1961 (has links) (PDF)
[Typewritten] Includes bibliography.
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Re-thinking the 'migrant community' : a study of Latin American migrants and refugees in AdelaideCohen, Erez. January 2001 (has links) (PDF)
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 259-270) Based on 18-months fieldwork, 1997-1999, in various organisations, social clubs and radio programs that were constructed by participants and 'outsiders' as an expression of a local migrant community. Attempts to answer and challenge what it means to be a Latin American in Adelaide and in what sense Latin American migrants and refugees in Adelaide can be spoken about as members of an 'ethnic/migrant community' in relation to the official multiculturalism discourse and popular representations of migrants in Australia.
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The construction of whiteness in Australia: Discourses of immigration and national identity from the White Australia Policy to multiculturalismGanley, Nathan Tobias Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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