Home language use and shift in Australia: Trends in the new millennium

The 25 million Australians today are identified with more than 300 ancestries. People’s home language use and shift patterns had demonstrated great variations as more immigrants from Asia-Pacific regions entered Australia. The ethnolinguistic composition of Australia’s population had undergone subst...

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Main Authors: Lubei Zhang, Linda Tsung, Xian Qi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1096147/full
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author Lubei Zhang
Linda Tsung
Xian Qi
author_facet Lubei Zhang
Linda Tsung
Xian Qi
author_sort Lubei Zhang
collection DOAJ
description The 25 million Australians today are identified with more than 300 ancestries. People’s home language use and shift patterns had demonstrated great variations as more immigrants from Asia-Pacific regions entered Australia. The ethnolinguistic composition of Australia’s population had undergone substantial changes in the last few decades. Based on the statistics from Australian censuses, the present paper aims to analyze the changes of people’s home language use and the shift patterns in the new Millennium. Five sets of census data released by Australian Bureau of Statistics were adopted as the secondary data source and descriptive analysis was conducted to disclose the dynamic picture of different home languages in Australia after 2000. The results suggest that the number of home language speakers in Australia has soared up quickly in the last two decades and great variations have been found between the traditional European migrant groups and the newly Asian arrivers. Mandarin has overtaken Italian and Greek to become the most populous home language other than English used in Australia since 2011 and great regional differences were also found to exist among different states and territories. Moreover, the ranking order of different home language speakers had changed considerably as compared with that in the last century. The language shift rates of different language communities and their cross-tabulations with generations, gender, age, and duration of residence in the latest available censuses after 2000 also revealed diverse developmental directions. The findings give us a glimpse of the current status of different home languages in Australia and help us to identify the potential factors impacting the shifting trends of different language communities. A better understanding of the language needs of different migrant communities may further help policymakers set more effective plans to accommodate an increasingly diverse Australian society.
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spelling doaj.art-f619fe6635bf450795afeb224a9d3ccc2023-02-09T13:45:24ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782023-02-011410.3389/fpsyg.2023.10961471096147Home language use and shift in Australia: Trends in the new millenniumLubei Zhang0Linda Tsung1Xian Qi2School of foreign languages, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu, ChinaSchool of languages and cultures, the University of Sydney, Darlington, NSW, AustraliaSchool of foreign languages, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu, ChinaThe 25 million Australians today are identified with more than 300 ancestries. People’s home language use and shift patterns had demonstrated great variations as more immigrants from Asia-Pacific regions entered Australia. The ethnolinguistic composition of Australia’s population had undergone substantial changes in the last few decades. Based on the statistics from Australian censuses, the present paper aims to analyze the changes of people’s home language use and the shift patterns in the new Millennium. Five sets of census data released by Australian Bureau of Statistics were adopted as the secondary data source and descriptive analysis was conducted to disclose the dynamic picture of different home languages in Australia after 2000. The results suggest that the number of home language speakers in Australia has soared up quickly in the last two decades and great variations have been found between the traditional European migrant groups and the newly Asian arrivers. Mandarin has overtaken Italian and Greek to become the most populous home language other than English used in Australia since 2011 and great regional differences were also found to exist among different states and territories. Moreover, the ranking order of different home language speakers had changed considerably as compared with that in the last century. The language shift rates of different language communities and their cross-tabulations with generations, gender, age, and duration of residence in the latest available censuses after 2000 also revealed diverse developmental directions. The findings give us a glimpse of the current status of different home languages in Australia and help us to identify the potential factors impacting the shifting trends of different language communities. A better understanding of the language needs of different migrant communities may further help policymakers set more effective plans to accommodate an increasingly diverse Australian society.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1096147/fullAustraliahome languagelanguage shiftmultilingualismmulticulturalism
spellingShingle Lubei Zhang
Linda Tsung
Xian Qi
Home language use and shift in Australia: Trends in the new millennium
Frontiers in Psychology
Australia
home language
language shift
multilingualism
multiculturalism
title Home language use and shift in Australia: Trends in the new millennium
title_full Home language use and shift in Australia: Trends in the new millennium
title_fullStr Home language use and shift in Australia: Trends in the new millennium
title_full_unstemmed Home language use and shift in Australia: Trends in the new millennium
title_short Home language use and shift in Australia: Trends in the new millennium
title_sort home language use and shift in australia trends in the new millennium
topic Australia
home language
language shift
multilingualism
multiculturalism
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1096147/full
work_keys_str_mv AT lubeizhang homelanguageuseandshiftinaustraliatrendsinthenewmillennium
AT lindatsung homelanguageuseandshiftinaustraliatrendsinthenewmillennium
AT xianqi homelanguageuseandshiftinaustraliatrendsinthenewmillennium