Filipino Australian
Filipino Australian
Kate Ceberano |
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Total population |
160,374 (by ancestry in 2006)[1] |
Regions with significant populations |
Most are found in Sydney, New South Wales and Melbourne, Victoria[2] |
Languages |
Australian English, Tagalog, Cebuano, and/or other Philippine languages
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Religion |
Roman Catholicism, Protestantism, Islam, Buddhism, and others.
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Related ethnic groups |
Filipino people and Overseas Filipinos
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Filipino Australians, Fil-Aus or Filos are Australians of Filipino ancestry. Filipino-Australians are the fifth-largest subgroup of the Overseas Filipinos. According to the 2006 census, there are over 160,374 Filipino Australians.[1] In Sydney, people born in the Philippines comprise 5.9% of the population in the City of Blacktown and it is the largest directly born ethnic group in Blacktown.[3]
Population
Currently Filipinos are the third largest Asian Australian immigrant group behind Vietnamese Australians and Chinese Australians,[4] Females accounted for 65.5% of the Philippine community while males represented 34.5% of the Filipino Australian population.[5] According to census data, 50.2 per cent of the Philippines-born were resident in New South Wales, followed by 21.6% in Victoria, 14.9% in Queensland and 5.2% in Western Australia.
History
Filipinos were excluded from entering Australia under the White Australia policy. As a consequence, their numbers in Australia remained minimal; confined to descendants of those few Filipinos who had migrated to the north west pearling areas of Western Australia and the sugar cane plantations of Queensland prior to 1901; until the abolition of racially selective immigration policies in 1966.[5] The 1901 census had recorded 700 Filipinos in Australia.[5]
Martial law in the Philippines; declared by former Philippine president, Ferdinand Marcos in 1972 and the renunciation of the White Australia Policy made Australia an attractive destination for Filipino emigrants, particularly skilled workers. Many Filipinos also settled in Australia from the 1970s onward as either migrant, workers, or the spouses of Australian citizens. Marriages between Filipinos and Australians rose very sharply from 1978, peaked in 1986 and remained high as of 2000, despite a dip in the early 1990s.[6] The 1980s were the period of the greatest Filipino immigration, with 1987-1988 being the peak year.[5]
Notable people
- Mig Ayesa, Theatre actor and rock vocalist
- Merlinda Bobis, writer
- Romy Cayabyab, web publisher
- Anne Curtis, actress and model
- Kate Ceberano, singer
- Kathleen de Leon Jones, former Hi-5 member
- Natalie Jackson Mendoza, actress (Hotel Babylon)
- Craig Wing, Australian Rugby League player (South Sydney Rabbitohs)
- Flip Simmons, Theatre actor and musician
- Bobby Morley, actor from Home and Away TV series
- Rose Porteous, socialite
- Mick Pennisi, basketball player
- Edd Aragon, cartoonist
- Iya Villania, actress and singer
- Israel Cruz, singer
- Robert James Reid, teen celebrity
- Chris Cayzer, actor and singer
- Sef Gonzales, murderer
- Jason Day, Golfer
- Jasmine Curtis, actress and model
- Julia Cortez, actress
- Lolita Farmer, community leader
- Aljin Abella Blue Jungle Fury Ranger
- Christine Cuaresma, Superannuation Industry Advocate
References
External links
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Southeast Asia |
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West Asia |
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Australia |
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Northern
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Western
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Central
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Balkan
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Eastern
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East
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South
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Southeast
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Americas |
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Africa |
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Oceania |
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Africa |
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Americas |
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Asia |
East Asia
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South Asia
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Southeast Asia
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West Asia
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Europe |
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Oceania |
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