BACKGROUND COLOUR

Who bears the brunt of Aussie discrimination?

Asian-Australians have the highest rates of self reported discrimination of all ethnic groups, with Middle Eastern-Australians second. They are most likely to experience discrimination at shops and restaurants, and places of work or education.

82 %

More than four in five (82%) of Asian-Australians have experienced any form of discrimination.

71 %

The highest proportion of Asian-Australian respondents reported experiencing discrimination at a shop or restaurant.

79 %

Slightly fewer Asian-Australians – 79% than the rest of the population – 82% – think Asian-Australians face discrimination.

88 %

A slightly higher proportion of Labor and Greens voters think Asian-Australians experience discrimination than Coalition voters.

Self-reported Discrimination, by ethnic identification
How often have you experienced discrimination because of your own ethnic origin in the following situations? (a) In your workplace (b) In education, i.e. at a school, TAFE, University (c) When renting or buying a house (d) In any dealings with the Police (e) In any dealings with government departments and services (f) When seeking services such as banking, finance, or legal services (g) At a shop or restaurant (h) At a sporting or public event.
Sources & Methodology
Variable description By ethnic identification
Variable time span 2019
Published by ANU Poll
Publisher Link https://csrm.cass.anu.edu.au/research/publications/research-note-asian-australian-experiences-discrimination-0
Data Source doi:10.26193/4G6EAT
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Support for the view that Asian-Australians experience discrimination is not an overly partisan issue.

The proportion of the population overall who think Asian-Australians experience discrimination - 81.6 per cent is very similar to the proportion of Asian-Australians who report experiencing discrimination - 81.9 per cent.

Slightly more Australians think indigenous Australians experience discrimination, and even more think African- Australians and Middle Eastern-Australians at 86 per cent and 87 per cent respectively.

Asian-Australians though are less likely to think that Asian-Australians experience discrimination -78.9 per cent - than the rest of the Australian population think Asian-Australians experience discrimination - 82 per cent. It should be noted though, that Asian-Australians are less likely to think all other groups in Australia (apart from Anglo-Australians) experience discrimination.

Support for the view that Asian-Australians experience discrimination is not an overly partisan issue. Labor and Greens voters were more likely to agree Asian-Australians experience discrimination, and the two voting groups agreed almost equally with Labor voters at 87.7 per cent and Greens voters at 88.2 per cent. While slightly Coalition voters agreed with the proposition, more than three quarters of them - 76 per cent - did agree Asian-Australians experienced discrimination.

Situations where Asian-Australians Experienced Discrimination
How often have you experienced discrimination because of your own ethnic origin in the following situations? (a) In your workplace (b) In education, i.e. at a school, TAFE, University (c) When renting or buying a house (d) In any dealings with the Police (e) In any dealings with government departments and services (f) When seeking services such as banking, finance, or legal services (g) At a shop or restaurant (h) At a sporting or public event.
Sources & Methodology
Variable description Per cent by situation
Variable time span 2019
Published by ANU Poll
Publisher Link https://csrm.cass.anu.edu.au/research/publications/research-note-asian-australian-experiences-discrimination-0
Data Source doi:10.26193/4G6EAT
CSV Data
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There are many situations where more than 50 per cent of those Asian-Australians surveyed report experiencing discrimination.

There are many situations where more than 50 per cent of those Asian-Australians surveyed report experiencing discrimination.

The highest number - 71 per cent - 71 per cent experienced discrimination at a shop or restaurant. Almost equal numbers, around 65 per cent - report discrimination in the workplace or in education (school, TAFE or university).

Almost 60 per cent report experiencing discrimination at a sporting or public event, or when dealing with government departments or services.