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‘Core’ culture hegemony and multiculturalism: perceptions of the
privileged position of Australians with British backgrounds.
ABSTRACT Tensions between acceptance of policies aimed at creating a multicultural
society and British (Anglo or Anglo-Celtic) Australians concerned about loss of their
privileged position as members of the ‘host’ society have been an important feature of
political debate in Australia in recent years. There is, however, a paucity of empirical
evidence available to assess the role of Anglo privilege in this debate. This study draws
on questions about attitudes to multicultural values and Anglo-privilege from a recent
survey of New South Wales and Queensland respondents to address this issue. Principal
components analysis of the attitudinal data shows that multiculturalism and privilege are
separate, independent dimensions in respondents’ thinking. Cross-tabulations show both
polarization of views and ambivalence in attitudes to Anglo privilege which are in
substantial part resolved by consideration of the geography of privilege and linked
multicultural values. While there are some underlying consistencies to peoples’ thinking
which relate to class, birthplace and age, there are also significant variations within and
among states, urban and rural areas.
KEYWORDS White (Anglo) privilege ● multiculturalism ● Australia ● geography
Does multiculturalism signal the end to … Anglo-Celtic [privilege] within
[Australia]? This is certainly the official multicultural argument [and] the view of
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a significant number of Anglo-Celtic Australians opposed to multiculturalism.
Since the early 1980s state support for issues such as ethnic diversity [and] Asian
immigration has generated … a ‘discourse of decline’ [among] a wide cross
section of the Anglo-Celtic population. This discourse either passively mourns or
actively calls for resistance against what it perceives as a state-sanctioned assault
[though the development of multicultural policies] on Australo-Britishness as a
natural cultural formation (Hage, 1995, 41).
Contemporary Australian society and polity is often characterised as increasingly
multicultural, but still struggling to disengage from a legacy of dominance of Anglo ‘host
society’ privilege. So a Labor government’s (1991-96) emphasis, under Prime Minister
Paul Keating, on the need for a new Australian identity reflecting the multicultural nature
of modern Australian society (Keating 1995b, Johnson 2000) had ‘huge implications’ for
the positioning of Anglo identity within broader conceptions of a new national identity.
Australians of Anglo backgrounds were being asked to accept a new, cosmopolitan form
of national identity, to embrace ethnic diversity and to give up their privileged position in
a post-assimilationist society (Johnson 2002, 175). One result was a conservative
backlash which was highly critical of any attempt to encourage ‘a more cosmopolitan and
inclusive identity’ (Johnson 2002, 177) which was seen to neglect ‘mainstream’ Australia
in favour of special (multicultural, non-Anglo) interest groups (Howard 1995a; 1995b).
The election of a Liberal-National government under Prime Minister John Howard in
1996 saw a marked decline in the importance of multiculturalism as a driving force for
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change in Australian society and a resurgence of Anglo privilege, values and identity.
Clearly, the question of Anglo privilege and Anglo decline is seen among many of the
conservative political elite as a matter of great concern, not least to the electorate Prime
Minister Howard was trying to win over in the mid-1990s. But just how important is the
issue of Anglo privilege among contemporary Australians, either among those of Anglo
background, or among those from non-Anglo backgrounds? How do different ethnic
groups perceive the privileged position of Australians of Anglo background? This study
addresses these questions.
ABOUT ANGLO PRIVILEGE
Australian society has been described as ‘exceptionally homogeneous’ until the mid-20th
century (Jupp and Freeman 1992). At its highest point in 1947, ‘the British component of
the population was over 90 per cent, of whom the vast majority had been born in
Australia’ (Jupp 1991, 62). A culturally formative ethnic dynamic, of English, and Celtic
peoples from Scotland and Ireland but with the Irish strongly dominant, had defined
Australia’s core culture from 1788. The assimilation of the Celtic component into a
dominant Anglo-Australian society and culture largely followed. Thus Dixson (1999, 9)
described how ‘eminent writers’ have consistently described Australia, in a matter-of-fact
way, as an ‘Anglo-Saxon’ society or country. By the end of World War 1, Anglo-Saxon
had already been shortened to Anglo. The contemporary incorporation of the word
‘Celtic’, as in ‘Anglo-Celtic’, into the lexicon used to describe Australia’s dominant
social and cultural fragment is a recent response to intensive lobbying by those of Irish
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birth or ancestry in particular to be recognized as a distinctive element of the Anglo-
Australian or British-Australian identity. As a consequence, the terms ‘Anglo’ and
‘Anglo-Celtic’ are often used interchangeably. This Anglo ethnicity has underpinned
Australian culture, its institutions and the nation itself since the beginning of European
settlement (Dixson 1999, 9), and still largely does so. Even allowing for the impact of
non-British immigration since 1945, their proportion had only reduced to 75 per cent in
1991 (Jupp 1991, 9). For the year ending mid-2002, Britain was still the largest source of
permanent arrivals1 (Australian Bureau of Statistics 2002, 32).
In spite of the demographics. Cochran (1995, 10) argues that, somewhere between the
1950s and the 1980s, the hitherto ‘Anglo-Saxon’ ‘host’ majority surrendered, or lost, its
social and cultural hegemony. The post World War 2 inflow of non-British migrants –
from central and southern Europe in the 1950s and 1960s, and from the eastern
Mediterranean in the 1960s and 1970s, then a major widening of source areas with the
ending of the White Australia policy in favour of skills-based criteria from the early
1970s – posed a challenge to the established sense of ethnic homogeneity, as did the
newly developed policy of multiculturalism as a basis for accepting and absorbing the
‘new ethnicity’. It was the Whitlam Labor government which effectively ended the
White Australia policy in 1973, launching Australia into a new, multicultural era of the
later 1970s through to the mid-1990s. Labor Prime Minister Keating (1995b, 31) was
moved to state that: ‘Today, Australians derive from more than 150 ethnic backgrounds
… multiculturalism is not a threat to Australian identity and ethos – it is inseparable from
it.’
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Keating’s basic argument was that contemporary Australian society was being
fundamentally reshaped by ethnic diversity. But such an argument had major and
negative implications for the former hegemonic status of Anglo identity. Anglo-Celtic
Australians were being asked to abandon the previous privileging of their identity,
implicit in pre-multicultural, assimilationist policies (Johnson 2002, 175). The then
Liberal (conservative) leader, Howard was very critical of the Keating Labor position,
arguing that it benefited special (including ethnically-based) interest groups, and
neglected ‘mainstream’ Australians (Howard 1995a; b). In fact, and while emphasising
his opposition to racism, he and the populist, racist politician, Pauline Hanson were both
speaking to sections of a largely common electoral base, the Anglos (Johnson 2002, 17;
on the Pauline Hanson One Nation Party, see Goot and Watson 2001). Hanson
specifically targeted Anglos, arguing that among other things, Labor government support
for ‘special interest’ groups such as immigrants had made of Anglos ‘the most
disadvantaged group in Australian society’ (quoted in The Sydney Morning Herald Good
Weekend 30 Nov 1996).
As Prime Minister of a Liberal-National government from 1996, Howard
moved quickly to remove funding from various ethnic community organisations.
Multiculturalism itself was not a term favoured by Howard (Johnson 2002, 177),
although his government eventually came to terms with it once it was redefined as
a general means for the retention of ‘common values’ (Howard 1999). A National
Multicultural Advisory Council appointed by the Howard Government developed
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what they called ‘Australian multiculturalism’, branded as remarkable by placing
Anglo-Australians centrally within the multicultural identity. The effect was to
accord a privileged status to Anglo-Australians within multicultural history and
identity. The Council's Chair (NMAC, 1999:4) commented that:The British and
Irish heritage, which includes our democratic system and institutions, our law, the
English language, much of our humour and our oft-quoted distinctive values of
the fair go, egalitarianism and mateship, together provide the foundation on which
Australian multiculturalism has been built.
The new focus on ‘mainstream’ Australians acted, according to Hage (2003, 1) to
produce an absence of concern for non-Anglo Australians, and a return to the old Anglo
values with their assimilationist disregard for the very precepts of multiculturalism.
Changes in attitudes towards immigrant groups which have occurred over the past
several decades are, however, rather more complex than simply multiculturalism versus
assimilation into the dominant Anglo culture (Hage 1995). At the core of this complexity
is an important class consideration. Dixson (1999, 33) argues that Anglo society in
European Australia, from its late 18th century beginnings until the mid-20th century or so,
was dominated by the lower-middle (working) and middle classes. But with the onset of
global economic restructuring from the mid-1970s in particular, and the decline of the
manufacturing sector, there has been a shift away from the lower-middle and middle class
nature of Anglo dominance in favour of a new managerial-professional class based on the
new knowledge economy. These constitute part of what Hage (1995, 44) refers to as
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cosmo-multiculturalists: people like Keating who acted to undermine the traditional class
base of the Anglo privilege position, only to replace it with another. Thus Hage (1995,
63) argues that the Cosmo-multiculturalism of the new class replaces, but continues, the
Eurocentric form of the earlier Australo-British working and middle class, except that it
has been changed by migration in a post-White Australia society, and increasingly turns
to Asia as Britain moves ever deeper into the European Community.
So, while the ‘old identity’ (including both working and middle classes) among
Anglos has been experiencing ‘decline of control’, there has been a shift to a new
privileged Anglo group (Hage 1995, 62). This was accompanied by a change from an
assimilationist perspective to that of the newly dominant Cosmo-multiculturalists, where
Anglo privilege is no longer central, does not aim to control the migrant presence, but
creates an opening within the dominant imaginary in which non-Anglo Australians can be
included. But the new class, from mainly managerial and professional ranks involved in
the new, knowledge economy, effectively maintains the pre-existing Anglo privilege by
virtue of the overwhelming majority of immigrants being working class (Forrest and
Johnston 2000). However, Hage (1998) tends to confuse the issue somewhat by
widening the notion of Anglo privilege to what he refers to as ‘white supremacy in a
multicultural society’. This is confusing because the concept of white – non-white
neglects tensions between Anglo and other (white) European identities (Johnson 2002,
179) and the protracted struggles by such groups – in particular Greek and Italian
immigrant groups – in support of multicultural policies and against previous policies of
assimilation into Anglo values (Collins 1999). A distinction between Anglo and ‘white’
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privilege must therefore be maintained. Examination of Anglo hegemony best facilitates
an assessment of the full panoply of viewpoints about the existence and importance of
privilege in contemporary Australian society, which is the object of this study.
DATA
Much of the literature reviewed in the previous section focuses on Anglo reactions to
erosion of their previously privileged position in a ‘post-assimilationist’ society, the
‘discourses of decline’ mentioned earlier. To date, very little, if any, attention has been
paid to the reverse situation – how do migrant groups view that privileged position? What
is more, there has been little empirical assessment of how Anglos themselves see their
situation. In the latter case, the attitudes and perceptions analysed in most commentaries
rely heavily upon statements by the (conservative) political and cultural elite, including
those from both major and minor parties. In an attempt to fill part of this gap in the
literature on the perceptions of a wide range of migrant groups, plus a cross section of
British- and Australian-born, this study draws on a question from a University of
NSW/Macquarie University (UNSW/MQU) survey of people’s attitudes and opinions
about aspects of racism in Australia.
The UNSW/MQU Racism Project survey was undertaken as a telephone questionnaire
conducted among residents of the states of Queensland (QLD) and New South Wales
(NSW) during October and December, 2001. The sample was drawn randomly from
within every second postcode district in the two states, and covers half of Australia’s total
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population. Returns from NSW accounted for 64 percent, and from Queensland 36 per
cent of the total, which closely approximates respective state population shares. A
sample total of 5056 valid responses were generated. The project required a sufficiently
large representation of respondents by geographic area – the sample was randomly drawn
from within every second postcode, but included at least one postcode from every
Statistical Local Area (SLA) in each state –and for that reason was restricted to the two
states. Responses to a question that ‘Australians from a British background enjoy a
privileged position in our society’ were sought on a five-point range between ‘strongly
disagree’ through ‘disagree’, ‘neither disagree nor agree’, ‘agree’ to ‘strongly agree’.
The question was one of 14 asked as part of the telephone survey. A summary of results
is contained in Dunn et al. (2004).
PERCEPTIONS OF ANGLO DOMINANCE
There are a number of dimensions to contemporary social perceptions of Anglo privilege
which have been identified, either explicitly or implicitly, in the preceding discussion.
Four of these – social (birthplace), class, age and multicultural values – are singled out
for discussion here.
Social group perceptions
There is an underlying complexity to group attitudes to the existence of Anglo privilege.
This is highlighted by the amount of inter- and intra-group variation in perceptions
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among Anglo-Australians, and from migrants from both English-speaking and non-
English speaking source areas in Table 1. The general impression is one of a general
polarisation of views both for and against the existence of Anglo cultural hegemony.
Higher proportions of NESB migrants than others agree that people of Anglo
backgrounds enjoy a privileged position, but there are important inter-group differences.
There is little indication here of any general in-group, out-group consistency.
Although the telephone survey did not ask about ancestry of the Australian born, an
indication of this was obtained by separation of the Australian born into English-speaking
only, and where a language other than English (LOTE) was spoken at home. In fact, the
latter’s views about Anglo privilege are very close to those among the Australian born
speaking only English at home, except for a higher proportion who have no opinion
either way. Among indigenous Australians, however, a noticeably higher proportion
agrees with Anglo privilege than does not. It is suggested that differences between the
Australian-born-LOTE-spoken-at-home from all NESB migrants in Table 1 can be
accounted for by the greater initial segregation of NESB migrants compared with those of
NESB ancestry (Forrest and Poulsen, 2003)
Migrants from English speaking backgrounds (ESB) have much the same views as the
Australian born, except that a greater proportion either agree or disagree, rather than
taking up a middle position. Among ESB migrants, however, there is evidence of
internal differences of perception. A clear majority of those from the UK/Eire and New
Zealand deny the concept of Anglo privilege. Similar views are held among Americans
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and Canadian migrants, except that the notion of Anglo privilege is more clearly rejected
and a higher proportion have no formed view. Among migrants from South Africa and
the Pacific Islands, on the other hand, a significant majority, as high as most non-English
speaking background (NESB) groups, agree that there is Anglo privilege. Arguably, this
is another case where “memories of Empire” attune these groups to the existence of
Anglo privilege; for example, a significant minority of South Africans, especially in
Sydney, are of Indian descent.
NESB migrants have been divided initially between those from Europe, many of
whom came to Australia before the White Australia policy was officially abandoned in
the early 1970s, and those from other parts of the world admitted after the abandonment
of that policy. Even so, slightly more European migrants agree that there is Anglo
privilege than do those from other parts of the world (mainly from Asia). Migrants from
both western and southern Europe agree most of all, and those from eastern Europe to a
lesser degree. While NESB migrants from non-Europeans origin areas are generally less
concerned or aware of Anglo privilege, there are again important differences in
perceptions. Those from the Middle East, northeast and southeast Asia show around 42-
44 per cent recognising the existence of Anglo privilege, while close to half or more of
migrants from south Asia and Latin America hold this view, but with a higher proportion
uncommitted. Interestingly, nearly all of the south Asian origins comprise the former
British-ruled territories of Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Burma. Here too,
an experience and knowledge of British colonial authority may lie behind these
Australians’ keener sense of Anglo privilege.
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Class perceptions
The survey assessed class in terms of level of education attainment. This was preferred
to occupation or income because of the large number of women who otherwise tend to be
marginalised in assessment of socio-economic status (class) when the other two measures
are used. The outcome of this cross-tabulation (Table 2) is generally consistent with
Hage’s (1995) class-based explanation of a new form of Anglo privilege, as shown by the
high percentage (43-45 per cent) of those who agree with the question among the tertiary
educated. There is, however, an important element of Dixson’s (1999) argument about
the lower- to middle-class origins of many Anglo-Australians (Dixson 1999) in the 43 per
cent of those with no formal education qualifications who accept that Anglo Australians
are (or should be) privileged. But this is offset by a slightly higher proportion who
disagree, which may, of course, be taken to mean that whatever privilege they may have
had has been lost to multiculturalism. This ‘no formal qualifications’ group is more
polarized than any other, with only 13 per cent in the ‘neither agree nor disagree’
category. The general impression is one of something of a J-shaped class curve, with
higher proportions agreeing to the notion of Anglo privilege at the top of the class
ranking, a lesser but still moderately high emphasis at the bottom, and rather lower
proportions in agreement among those with middle levels of educational attainment. It is
worth noting, too, that the class (education)-privilege relationship displayed in Table 2 is
not changed by disaggregating the results among Australian born, ESB and NESB
migrant respondents.
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Nevertheless, the general form of the postulated relationship should not be allowed to
obscure the level of polarisation between those who either agree or disagree, which also
occurred among birthplace groups. Thus among the tertiary educated, 36-40 per cent
disagree with the idea of Anglo-privilege, and the proportion is higher (44 per cent)
among those with no formal qualifications. In between, the proportion of those who
disagree is consistently higher than for those who agree. What is apparent here is that
any notion of Anglo privilege, while more apparent among those with high levels of
education attainment, is, even so, by no means widely accepted. Anglo privilege is a
perception held by more of those with higher socio-economic status, as measured by
education attainment, than by any others. However, among none of the class groups is the
perception held by a majority of respondents.
Age group perceptions
In general terms there is more agreement with the notion of Anglo privilege and
hegemony with increasing age (Table 3). Such an age-privilege relationship involves
three main time periods:
• prior to the major change away from Anglo-Celtic origins which occurred in the
late 1940s and early 1950s with the relative decline of immigrant numbers from
Britain and Ireland;
• the greater dominance, until the early 1970s, of NESB European migrant origins;
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• followed from the early 1970s by the end of the White Australia policy and the
last three decades of migration from ostensibly any part of the world.
These three periods generally correspond to those today aged in their late 60s and older;
those in their mid-40s to late 60s; and those aged up to their early- to mid-40s.
Among those aged 18-44, the proportion who agree that Anglo privilege exists is in
the mid- to high-30s per cent, rising to the low 40s among those aged 45-74, and then to
the high 40s per cent among those aged in their mid-70s and older. At the same time, the
proportions of those who have no opinion either way is highest among the youngest
respondents, and falls with age: a quarter of those in the 18-24 age bracket have no
particular view of Anglo privilege while fewer than 8 per cent of the elderly adopt this
position. Nevertheless, and within the general age-privilege relationship, there remains a
strong element of polarisation of views between those who generally agree with a
perception of Anglo privilege and those who do not.
Multicultural values and Anglo privilege
Hage (1995, 41) characterised the protagonists of multiculturalism and of Anglo privilege
as mutually opposed to each other, in that the decline of one is seen by many to mirror
the ascendancy of the other. The emergence of Hage’s (1995, p. 63) middle class cosmo-
multiculturalists did nothing to change this relationship. Rather, it embodied the
replacement of the privileged perspective of working and middle class Anglo-Celts
generally with a narrower, essentially upper-middle class view. An attempt to assess
such a dichotomy is shown in Table 4, using one question from the survey which reflects
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assimilationist (those that agreed Australia is weakened by people of different ethnic
origins sticking to their old ways) as against multiculturalist views (those that disagreed).
Although the same polarisation of views noted previously is again apparent, there is a
strong tendency for those with a multicultural perspective to also agree with the existence
of Anglo privilege. This is not a contradiction of Hage’s (1995) viewpoint, but rather
recognition of a barrier to be surmounted. The division of opinion on Anglo privilege is
even stronger among those with an assimilationist perspective. Many of these
‘assimilationists’ may be those who see their former hegemony as losing out to
multiculturalism. Nevertheless, many more disagree that Australians from a British
(Anglo) background enjoy a privileged position, which may of course reflect recognition
of the loss of that status.
It is apparent from Table 4 that the assimilationist viewpoint is much more strongly
associated with denial of Anglo privilege than the multiculturalist viewpoint is with the
recognition of Anglo privilege. While 46 per cent of assimilationist respondents
‘disagree’ or ‘strongly disagree’ in each case with the notion of Anglo privilege, the view
of multiculturalists on its existence is only strong (47 per cent of respondents) among
those with ‘strongly disagree’. The issue of Anglo privilege is clearly much more
important to those who hold assimilationist values than among those with multicultural
values.
ANGLO PRIVILEGE, MULTICULTURALISM AND RACISM IN AUSTRALIA
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The advent of multiculturalism effectively asked Australians of British or Anglo
backgrounds to abandon the previous privileging of that identity and attendant
assimilationist policies in favour of the new, multicultural perspective. This served to
conflate issues of cultural hegemony and national identity. This conflation was
reinforced by then Opposition leader Howard’s (1995a; b) support for ‘mainstream’
Australians as opposed to the Government’s supposed support for special interest
(specifically non-Anglo) groups. This was extended by the populist, racist politician,
Pauline Hanson’s positioning of Anglo-Australians as a disadvantaged group. In that
Howard and Hanson were both talking to a largely common electoral base (Johnson
2002, 17), national identity and racism became conflated in the ensuing debate. But is
this the way in which these issues are popularly perceived? Results from the University
of New South Wales/Macquarie University (UNSW/MQU) Racism Project provide some
answers.
Nine survey questions explored attitudes to aspects of multiculturalism, Anglo
privilege and racism. Principal components analysis accounted for 49 per cent of
variation among the 5056 respondents across the nine attitude variables, and produced
three dimensions (components) with eigenvalues above unity. In Table 5, significant
variable loadings have been highlighted. A relationship between Anglo privilege and
racial prejudice in Australia is brought out in high loadings on these two variables in the
second component. Multicultural values on the first component are linked not with
privilege, but positively (Australia is not weakened by …) with those who feel secure
with or feel it is good for society to comprise people of different ethnicities, and equality
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among races; and negatively (Australia is weakened …) with personal racial prejudice (I
am prejudiced against …) and opposition to intermarriage.
The fact that Anglo privilege and multicultural values load on two different and
independent components, and each with different aspects of racist attitudes – racism is
the common denominator – adds a new and previously unremarked element to what Hage
(1995) identified as opposition between assimilationists who support Anglo privilege,
and multiculturalists. Results from the principal components analysis show that:
• while respondents are polarized in their attitudes to multiculturalism compared
with some aspects of racism (component 1);
• they agree on an association between Anglo privilege and racial prejudice
generally (component 2); but there is no clear link between privilege and
multiculturalism; and
• this is reflected in the polarisation of views apparent in Table 4.
Is there a geography of Anglo privilege?
Opposing views about the existence of Anglo privilege, among people from similar social
and demographic categories brought out in Tables 2 and 3, suggest the possibility of a
spatial dimension. A test for such a geography is approached by classifying Statistical
Sub Divisions (SSDs) in Sydney and Brisbane, and the larger Statistical Divisions (SDs)
elsewhere in NSW and QLD. We use an entropy grouping procedure, a major benefit of
which is that it is not constrained by any requirements of normal distribution common to
17
many other procedures. Its ability to characterize and group observation areas – SSDs
and SDs in this case – with a minimum of information loss is reviewed by Johnston and
Semple (1983; see also Forrest and Johnston 1981). In summary, it groups SSDs and
SDs with similar response profiles, that is, proportions of respondents in each of the
‘strongly disagree’ through ‘strongly agree’ categories. Unlike other grouping
procedures, it minimizes the amount of within-group variance for (1… n) groups at each
iteration by retesting all possible groupings of observations. The number of groups
selected is determined subjectively by a decreasing amount of variation accounted for by
proceeding to higher numbers of groups.
In this analysis, NSW and QLD are each considered separately, because part of the
case for a geography includes possible state level differences. For NSW, seven
identifiable groupings of SSDs and SDs accounted for 78 per cent of variation among the
SSDs and SDs, while in QLD, six groups took up 75 per cent of the variation. In fact,
interstate differences are small in terms of overall mean values (Tables 5 and 6), but there
are some differences in the standard deviations, or ranges about the means. In particular,
QLD has a much narrower range of variation (lower standard deviations) across all SSDs
and SDs on agreement with Anglo privilege than NSW. This is offset by a somewhat
greater range (higher standard deviations) for NSW on ‘strongly disagree’, though
scarcely any difference on ‘disagree’. In other words, more Queenslanders are inclined
towards a neutral view on the question of privilege, but again with a slightly greater range
among SSDs and SDs than in NSW.
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Average profiles for each of the seven groups for NSW and six groups for QLD are
set out in Tables 6 and 7, where a group’s percentage which deviates by half of one
standard deviation or more is shown in bold ; those that deviate by more than one
standard deviation are also asterisked. The strength with which views are held depends
on the values, which are expressed as above (positive) or below (negative) the mean and
relative to the standard deviations. Negative figures show below average support for any
particular variable. For example, areas in Group 3 for NSW have much higher
percentages of respondents than the average for NSW in the ‘strongly agree’ and
‘neutral’ categories, and an above average proportion who ‘strongly disagree’. The tables
have been arranged in a broad continuum between generally agreeing there is privilege
(towards the top) to generally disagreeing (towards the bottom). At the same time there is
a clear exemplification of the range of views within groups and overlap among groups.
The distribution of group areas for NSW and QLD largely reflects the ambivalence
among social groups and regions brought out in previous discussion. While there are
associations which indicate the presence of a geography of privilege, that geography is
not always obvious. For example, there is no particular distinction between urban and
rural. Rather the strength and range of responses varies more within urban and rural
areas than it does between them. This is consistent with current arguments advocating
the end of the notion of a urban versus rural dichotomy (cf. Amin and Thift, 2002). The
common element linking urban and rural perceptions of the existence or otherwise of
privilege is closely associated with the impacts of global economic restructuring, and, in
turn, perceptions of advantage or disadvantage. This has led to what one commentator
19
saw as “the old Australia speaking to the new” (Oakes, 1998). For people of the ‘old’
Australia, “everything in Australia is changing too fast” (Goot, 1998, 69): they reject
economic rationalisation (global economic restructuring) and social change
(multiculturalism versus Anglo privilege and assimilation) in the ‘new’ Australia of the
late 20th century. The same argument applies to a class-based explanation in
metropolitan areas, where economic restructuring disproportionately disadvantages
working class groups in the manufacturing employment sector. This is something the
conservative side of politics, both the Liberal-National (Country) Party Prime Minister
and the right-wing radical populist leader, Pauline Hanson, both evoke when talking
about ‘Anglo-Australians as the most disadvantaged group’.
The geography of privilege, linked to that of support or otherwise for multicultural
values (Forrest et al., 2002) provides general support for Hage’s (1994, 41) view of a
generally negative relationship between the two. Within the Sydney metropolitan area,
predominantly working class areas (groups 2 and 6) are split in their perceptions of Anglo
privilege. In the city’s inner west (group 2), where the population is middle aged to
older, there is a strong perception of privilege. In outer western districts (group 6), a
younger to middle aged region, on the other hand, the opposite is the case. Both regions
have strong ethnic population components. Middle to lower socio-economic status
respondents in outer suburban areas (group 5) also deny the existence of privilege. In all
three groups of areas, support for multiculturalist values is low. Middle to higher socio-
economic status regions, dominated by professional and managerial occupation groups
(group 4), generally support the existence of privilege, but many hold a neutral view, and
20
a smaller proportion disagree. Here too, support for multiculturalism is low by Sydney
standards.
Outside Sydney there is a wide range of responses. Some rural areas (in groups 5-7)
tend to reject the existence of Anglo privilege. Western districts of the state (parts of
groups 2 and 3), on the other hand, just as strongly agree that privilege exists; there is a
relatively high level of antagonism to multiculturalism in these areas. Among the
industrial cities of Newcastle (group 4) and Wollongong (group 5), and their hinterland
regions, there is a wide range of views in the former, but as to the latter, respondents on
this and on multicultural values largely disagrees. In both cities, self-identification with
racist views is high, and support for multiculturalism is moderate to low. In general
terms, support for One Nation and its attendant notion of Anglo disadvantage at the 1998
federal election in rural NSW was strongest where there was most agreement about
Anglo privilege (Forrest, et al. 2001); any association with multicultural values, however,
was quite varied (see Forrest et al. 2002). This reflects findings on the separation of
racist and multiculturalist views on the one hand, and Anglo privilege on the other,
brought out in earlier discussion of Table 5.
Brisbane respondents’ views on Anglo privilege are more polarized than in Sydney.
Middle to upper-middle class areas of the city (group 1), agree to strongly agree that there
is privilege, but opposition to multiculturalism is low. Working class areas south and east
of the city, along with Queensland’s main regional centres (groups 5 and 6), largely reject
notions of privilege, but opposition to multicultural values is high by Brisbane standards..
21
This latter grouping includes Ipswich, where One Nation leader Pauline Hanson won her
seat in federal parliament in 1996. North of Brisbane, respondents in the retirement and
tourist area of the Sunshine Coast (group 1) agree privilege exists, but those in the more
heavily built up tourist and retirement area of the Gold Coast (group 4), have very mixed
views. Interestingly, the One Nation vote at the 1998 Queensland state election was high
in all the major regional centres, the Gold Coast and the Sunshine Coast (Davis and
Stimson 1998). Here again is evidence of the separation of issues of privilege from those
of multiculturalism and racism commonly identified with the One Nation Party.
Unlike NSW, the views of respondents in country regions of QLD about Anglo
privilege range mainly through mixed to neutral and disagree. Thus respondents from
remote areas of western Queensland (group 3) largely reject any notion of privilege,
while those in the far north of the state (parts of group 3), where there is a substantial
Aboriginal population, have strongly neutral views; there is a relatively high level of
support for multiculturalism. In these areas support for One Nation in 1998 was weakest
(Davis and Stimson 1998), and support for multiculturalism about average (Forrest et al.,
2002). Respondents in metropolitan fringe areas around Brisbane (group 1) strongly
agree that Australians with a British background are privileged; this is in a region where
there was strong support for One Nation.
CONCLUSION
The distinction between Anglo (or Anglo-Celtic) and ‘white’ privilege is an important
focus for this study. For various reasons, not least among NESB migrants from southern
22
Europe and the Middle East, ‘white’ Australians in general are unlikely to share the same
degree of privilege in Australia as those from an Anglo, or Anglo-Celtic background. It
is also likely that non-Anglo Australians (migrants and those born here) who have
benefited from social mobility may still be able to recognise Anglo privilege, while
denying any notion of that privilege. There was another reason for targeting Anglo
privilege. This is the fact that the international literature on ‘whiteness’ has
fundamentally been about exposing cultural norms, often norms that have been
naturalized to the point where they are culturally invisible, simply accepted or taken for
granted. In Australia, therefore, any analysis of privilege has to be targeted at the
supposedly ‘non-ethnic’ and ‘invisible’ Anglo. Hage’s (1995) division of Australian
society into white’ and ‘non-white’ from the point of view of the privileged and the non-
privileged is not, therefore, an adequate conceptual instrument.
Findings from this study indicate that the notion of Anglo privilege is both multi-
dimensioned socially and varied geographically. From a social viewpoint, cultural
background, age and class, and ideas about multiculturalism, have all been identified as
bearing on people’s attitudes to and perceptions of Anglo privilege. Age provides a
generally straightforward form of relationship with different periods of acculturation into
Australian society. More fundamental to the way in which social difference bears on
perceptions of Anglo privilege among those who would be considered part of the Anglo-
Celtic social hegemony, is the differentiation between the ‘old’ working and middle class
on the one hand and the ‘new’ managerial-professional class based on the new
knowledge economy (Dixson 1999). But this has to be coupled with Hage’s (1995)
23
argument that the Anglo orietnated thinking of the former group is scarcely different
from that of the latter, except that it has been changed into a new form of Cosmo-
multiculturalism based on class differentiation between the old and new: the new and
generally less skilled migrants can be readily accepted because they pose no cultural
challenge to the Cosmo-multiculturalists. Thus is multiculturalism readily accepted into
a new class structure which implicitly confers privilege, leaving the old urban working
and middle class largely abandoned and left to face the chill winds of cultural challenge
and social change on their own. Except, of course, that the principal components analysis
of survey respondents does not differentiate simply between multiculturalism and
privilege. Rather, it presents these as separate dimensions, linked by aspects of racism.
Among those who are not part of the original or current Anglo-Celtic hegemony set,
however, non-English speaking background (NESB) migrants and those of Australian
birth but NESB cultures, do not present a united face on the issue of privilege. Among
the latter, there is little difference from the Australian born of English speaking cultural
background, suggesting that assimilation into the ‘host’ society has occurred. Among
ESB and NESB migrants, the former are close to those of the Australian born speaking
only English at home, except that they are more polarised, with fewer adopting a middle
position. Among the latter, there is considerable variation, but in general those from
European backgrounds perceive Anglo privilege more strongly than those from Asian
backgrounds. This is reflected in the fact that, apart from those who came into Australia
as refugees, Asian-NESB migrants are assimilating faster than their European born
24
predecessors (Forrest and Poulsen 2003). Perceptually at least, recognition of Anglo
privilege, reflecting social exclusion or ‘otherness’, cannot be simply explained.
Geographically, there are equally important variations. First and perhaps foremost,
there is no simple urban-rural dichotomy, which might have been expected in terms of a
significant migrant presence in the (major) urban areas, hence a degree of exposure to
ethnic migrant groups which does not generally occur in rural areas. Rather the strength
and range of responses to the issue of Anglo privilege varies across urban-rural lines,
more in terms of reactions to social and economic change – the ‘old’ Australia speaking
to the ‘new’ – within a nuanced construction of what makes for the ‘old’ and the ‘new’.
Privilege as such is not always the central issue in this context, as suggested by variations
in support for the political party – One Nation – which most appeals to the ‘old’ Australia
but which is not consistently correlated with recognition of Anglo privilege.
In Sydney and Brisbane, the privilege divide relates closely to both social structure
and population diversity. The higher socio-economic status areas of Sydney and
Brisbane. including the increasingly gentrified but still socially diverse inner city, are the
home of Hage’s Cosmo-multiculturalists. Many recognise Anglo privilege, and indeed
may be unconsciously, if not consciously, aiding and abetting its continuance. Similarly,
many would deny privilege in these inner city areas of Anglo, older, but still affluent,
‘old money’ suburbs simply because they do not see themselves as being privileged, but
simply as Anglo-Australians within ‘Australian multiculturalism’; as Hage (2003,1) has
25
noted, the effect is to create an ‘absence of concern’ for non-Anglo Australians which
acts to enshrine Anglo privilege by default.
A second region embraces less affluent to ‘aspirational’ areas of middle to outer
suburbia. These are quintessentially Dixson’s (1999) working to middle classes areas,
where people see themselves as having lost out on their former privileged position as
Anglo-Australians. People in these areas have polarized views on the issue of Anglo
privilege but, given their sense of economic vulnerability as mainly manufacturing
workers at a time of major contraction in this sector through global restructuring, a sense
of cultural loss may well be linked to competition with immigrants, especially NESB
immigrants, for fewer jobs. But whatever their views on privilege may be, they are much
more united in their antagonism to multicultural values, and findings here suggest this is
associated with racist attitudes. To these two broad regions, which are common to both
cities, must be added a third. This comprises, in Sydney, respondents in an inner middle
ring of suburban areas of cultural diversity, less affluent than the first mentioned region,
but also economically vulnerable, who recognise both Anglo privilege and racism.
In terms of the politics of anti-racism, and for electoral politics generally, there are
several important implications arising from the findings of this study. For the Cosmo-
multiculturalists there is no substantial problem of marginalisation, nor the sense of it.
For the ‘left behind Anglos’ (and some other longer established European groups) there is
both an economic and a cultural alienation, where current politics (articulated earlier in
this paper) exacerbates, feeds into and off, this alienation. Among the ‘left behind
26
Anglos’, economic restructuring worsens their plight. The politics of these grievances
and alienation are both fraught and worrisome, and deserving of further study in the light
of findings presented here.
27
Notes
1 Excluding those from New Zealand, who have special entry rights.
28
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32
Table 1 Birthplace and response to idea of Anglo privilege (per cent values)
________________________________________________________________________ Strongly Disagree Neither agree Agree Strongly Born in Disagree nor disagree agree N ________________________________________________________________________ Australian born – Language other than English (LOTE) spoken at home or not Non-LOTE 9.7 33.9 18.5 30.7 7.3 3643 LOTE at home 11.9 29.6 22.1 27.9 8.4 226 Aborigines 8.0 28.4 19.3 33.0 11.4 104 English speaking origin areas (ESB) Total ESB 14.3 32.9 14.8 29.0 9.0 575 UK/Eire 16.2 33.8 12.8 26.4 9.4 352 ? New Zealand 12.7 31.7 16.2 29.6 6.3 142 ? USA/Canada 12.5 37.5 20.8 16.7 12.5 24 ? Sn Africa 6.3 18.8 18.7 40.1 12.5 32 ? Pacific Islds 5.0 25.0 15.0 40.0 7.5 40 ? Non-English speaking origin areas Total NESB 5.4 29.2 16.5 39.8 9.1 538? (a) European Total European 5.5 28.3 13.4 40.9 7.5 254 Wn Europe 6.2 27.9 10.8 44.2 6.2 129 ? En Europe 6.1 36.4 15.1 33.3 6.2 33 ? Sn Europe 4.3 26.1 16.3 39.1 9.8 92 ? (b) Non-European Total non-Eur 4.9 27.7 17.9 35.8 9.8 307 ? Middle East 3.0 37.9 15.2 31.8 12.1 66 ? NE Asia 4.6 26.8 18.5 39.8 4.6 108 ? SE Asia 8.1 25.1 16.1 37.1 4.8 62 ? S. Asia 4.2 18.7 20.8 37.5 16.7 48 ? Latin America 4.3 26.1 21.7 21.7 26.1 23 ? Note: Row sums fall short of 100 per cent by a non-response category (not shown) ? Add in non-response values & recalculate. [I don’t see any compelling reason to. Alternatively, they could be grouped / summed with the ‘Niether’ responses for this question.]
33
Table 2 Education attainment (class) and response to idea of Anglo privilege (per
cent values) Education Strongly Disagree Neither agree Agree Strongly Disagree nor disagree agree ________________________________________________________________________ Univ. degree 9.0 26.9 18.8 35.0 10.2 Other tertiary 11.9 28.0 17.4 32.3 10.3 Qualifications Trade or TAFE 10.8 36.7 18.4 28.6 7.1 Higher School 10.9 34.1 16.2 31.9 6.8 Certificate School 10.3 37.9 15.2 29.3 7.3 Certificate No formal 7.7 36.0 13.1 36.4 6.8 Qualifications Note: There were 5020 respondents to the privilege question; 156 did not allow a valid cross-tabulation Non-responses across have been excluded – re-include???
34
Table 3 Age group and response to idea of Anglo privilege (per cent values) ________________________________________________________________________ Age group Strongly Disagree Neither agree Agree Strongly Disagree nor disagree agree ________________________________________________________________________ 18-24 7.8 28.1 25.5 31.9 6.6 25-34 9.3 33.6 19.9 30.2 6.9 35-44 11.0 32.8 19.9 27.8 8.4 45-54 11.0 34.0 14.4 31.8 8.7 55-64 12.0 33.7 12.2 32.9 9.1 65-74 9.8 35.9 12.0 34.7 7.5 75+ 6.0 30.3 7.9 41.3 6.9 ________________________________________________________________________ Note: There were 5020 respondents; 127 did not allow a valid cross-tabulation. The rows exclude non-response (re-include???)
35
Table 4 Multiculturalism versus Anglo privilege (per cent values) Multicultural vs Australians from a British background enjoy privileged position assimilationist Strongly Disagree Neither agree Agree Strongly values1 Disagree nor disagree agree Multicultural values Strongly 15.4 18.5 17.0 31.2 16.1 Disagree Disagree 6.7 36.2 15.8 32.9 6.2 Neither agree nor disagree 9.6 29.1 22.1 29.4 7.3 Assimilationist values Agree 6.5 38.9 13.0 33.5 5.4 Strongly Agree 19.9 26.1 16.3 25.2 10.4 Note: Of the 5056 respondents, there were 127 unusable responses. Only valid
responses have been included in this table. 1 The question was “Australia is weakened by people of different ethnic origins sticking to their old ways”
36
Table 5 Principal components analysis of attitudes to indicators of Anglo privilege,
multiculturalism and racism in Australia1
Variables2 Rotated Component Matrix 1 2 3 It is good for society to be made up of different cultures 0.70 0.20 0.03 I feel secure with people of different ethnicities 0.60 -0.01 0.08 Australia is weakened by people of different ethnic origins sticking to their old ways -0.49 -0.08 0.39 There is racial prejudice in Australia 0.07 0.74 0.16 Australians from a British background enjoy a privileged position in our society -0.01 0.74 -0.16 It is not good for people of different races to intermarry -0.53 -0.06 0.19 All races of people are equal 0.63 -0.01 0.12 Humankind is made up of different races 0.06 0.03 0.90 I am prejudiced against other cultures -0.63 0.13 0.06 Per cent variance accounted for 24.65 12.65 11.59 1 Source: University of NSW and Macquarie University Racism questionnaire, 2001 2 All variables were coded: strongly disagree (= 1); disagree; neither disagree nor agree; agree; strongly agree (= 5); significant loadings are highlighted.
37
Table 6 Entropy analysis of Anglo privilege in New South Wales _______________________________________________________________________ Group Strongly Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Disagree agree ________________________________________________________________________ Mean 10.15 32.44 18.71 30.61 8.08
Std. Dev. 5.46 6.79 5.17 7.03 3.95
1 0.61 -4.42 -7.18* 7.99* 3.00
2 -8.26* -7.80* 4.96 8.28* 2.83
3 4.23 -1.72 10.35 * -17.59* 4.73
4 1.15 -5.31 2.77 -1.06 2.46
5 -3.50 5.37 -0.91 1.05 -2.01
6 1.47 7.19 -1.57 -1.99 -5.11
7 22.39 * -6.25 * -10.78 * -7.60* 2.23
________________________________________________________________________ Note: Figures in bold denote >0.5SD deviation from the mean; figures with an asterisk
show >1SD deviation
38
Table 7 Entropy analysis of Anglo privilege in Queensland _______________________________________________________________________ Group Strongly Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Disagree agree ________________________________________________________________________ Mean 9.96 32.90 19.99 30.43 6.71
Std. Dev. 3.20 6.36 6.09 4.26 2.67
1 -0.46 -0.41 -2.28 4.80* 2.75*
2 -2.39 -2.28 6.80* -1.85 -0.28
3 1.19 0.42 1.60 0.45 -3.65*
4 3.11 -4.97 4.15 -5.47* 3.18*
5 -4.92* 14.66* -11.17 * 1.77 -0.34
6 4.21* 3.20 -5.75 -1.45 -0.21
________________________________________________________________________ Note: Figures in bold denote >0.5SD deviation from the mean; figures with an asterisk
show >1SD deviation
39
40
‘Core’ culture hegemony and multiculturalism: perceptions of the
privileged position of Australians with British backgrounds.
James Forrest and Kevin Dunn Macquarie University, University of New South Wales, Australia Australia [email protected]