Adaptation to Democracy among Immigrants in Australia

Date

2010

Authors

Bilodeau, Antoine
Kanji, Mebs
McAllister, Ian

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Sage Publications Inc

Abstract

This article examines adaptation to democracy among immigrants who leave authoritarian regimes to settle in Australia. Two questions are addressed. First, do immigrants from authoritarian regimes successfully adapt to democracy, in terms of both supporting democracy and participating in the electoral process? And second, does the pre-migration socialization in authoritarian regimes influence immigrants' democratic transition? Using the 2004 Australian Election Study and the Australian section of the 2005 World Values Survey, the findings indicate that if immigrants from authoritarian regimes lag behind the rest of the population in terms of support for democracy, they tend to participate at least as much as the rest of the population in electoral activities. Overall, the study highlights both the persistence of and the change in immigrants' pre-migration political orientations.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: Immigrants; Migrants; Refugees

Citation

Source

International Political Science Review

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31