Published Resources Details Journal Article

Author
Jakubowicz, A., Collins, J., Reid, C, Chafic, W.
Title
Minority Youth and Social Transformation in Australia: Identities, Belonging and Cultural Capital
In
Social Inclusion
Imprint
vol. 2, no. 2, 2014, pp. 5-16
Description

Increasingly minority youth, especially from Muslim backgrounds, have been seen in Australian public policy and the media as potentially disruptive and transgressive. In some European societies similar young people have been portrayed as living in parallel and disconnected social spaces, self-segregated from interaction with the wider community. Yet Australian ethnic minority youth do not fulfil either of these stereotypes. Rather, despite their often regular experiences of racism or discrimination, they continue to assert a strong identification with and belonging to Australian society, albeit the society that marginalizes and denigrates their cultural capital. In particular it is the neighbourhood and the locality that provides the bridge between their home cultures and the broader world, contributing to a range of positive aspirations and fluid identities.
As of 27-4-16 lit review indicators were: Employment, Social capital, Cultural capital, Racism.
Methodology: Surveys of CALD youth. First survey was 340 CALD youth. Second survey was 332 young Muslim Australians

Abstract

Increasingly minority youth, especially from Muslim backgrounds, have been seen in Australian public policy and the media as potentially disruptive and transgressive. In some European societies similar young people have been por-trayed as living in parallel and disconnected social spaces, self-segregated from interaction with the wider community. Yet Australian ethnic minority youth do not fulfil either of these stereotypes. Rather, despite their often regular experi-ences of racism or discrimination, they continue to assert a strong identification with and belonging to Australian socie-ty, albeit the society that marginalizes and denigrates their cultural capital. In particular it is the neighbourhood and the locality that provides the bridge between their home cultures and the broader world, contributing to a range of positive aspirations and fluid identities.