疏离与边缘化:第二代南亚穆斯林融入澳洲社会

M. Iqbal
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摘要

本研究的目的是研究墨尔本六个南亚社区的第二代穆斯林移民的社会融合水平,这些移民要么是作为父母陪伴的孩子来到澳大利亚的,要么是在这里出生的。由于缺乏与他们融入澳大利亚社会相关的信息,我们在2016年11月至2017年3月期间,通过半结构化问卷调查对117名来自巴基斯坦、印度、孟加拉国、斯里兰卡、马尔代夫岛和缅甸的男性和女性进行了详细的研究。这项研究的结果表明,来自六个南亚国家的第二代穆斯林是年轻的城市居民,他们中的大多数人对澳大利亚的生活不太乐观。在今天的澳大利亚,仍然有证据表明对穆斯林的歧视普遍存在,特别是在就业方面。这项研究表明,来自墨尔本六个社区的年轻穆斯林更有可能失业、就业不足和生活贫困。尽管他们的教育水平很高,但与普通澳大利亚人相比,穆斯林从事专业工作的可能性更小,获得面试机会的可能性也更小,与其他澳大利亚人相比,他们的教育水平获得的经济回报也要少得多。本研究表明,穆斯林和澳大利亚社会在宗教信仰、性别角色和性规范方面存在显著差异。然而,在实践中,穆斯林并没有像荷兰、法国或德国那样,从主流文化中发展出完全独立的“亚文化”。移民的基本文化价值观似乎随着澳大利亚社会的主流文化而改变。这项研究表明,第二代穆斯林移民,他们中的大多数已经部分地但在功能上融入了东道国社会,保留了一些或更多自己的文化价值观。这项研究的结果表明,它破坏了之前的假设,即来自南亚的第二代穆斯林移民在提高他们的“社会融合水平”方面比他们在墨尔本的第一代同行做得更好。从这项研究中可以明显看出,来自这六个社区的第二代穆斯林中的很大一部分已经在更广泛的澳大利亚社会中被疏远和边缘化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Alienated and Marginalised: The Social Integration of the Second Generation South Asian Muslims into Australian Society
The purpose of this study was to research the level of social integration of second generation Muslim immigrants of six South Asian communities in Melbourne, who, either had arrived in Australia as accompanied children with their parents or born here. As a lack of information existed relative to their social integration into Australian society, a detailed research study was conducted through a semi-structured questionnaire survey, involving 117 respondents, both male and female, from Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Sri-Lanka, Maldives Island and Myanmar, during the November 2016 and March 2017 period. The findings of this study shows that the second generation Muslims from six South Asian nations are young city dwellers and a majority of them are less optimistic about life in Australia. In today’s Australia, there is still evidence of widespread discrimination against Muslims and especially through employment practices. This research has shown that the younger Muslims from six communities in Melbourne, are more likely to be unemployed, under-employed and living in poverty. Despite their levels of education, Muslims are less likely to work in the professions and less likely to be granted a job interview than the average Australians and receive significantly less economic returns for their level of education than other Australians. This study shows that the significant differences between Muslims and Australian society are found in religiosity, gender roles and sexual norms. However, in practice, Muslims are not developing a totally separate ‘sub-culture’ from the mainstream culture as is evident in the Netherlands, France or Germany. Basic cultural values of migrants appear to change in conformity with the predominant culture of the Australian society. This research has shown that the second generation Muslim migrants, a majority of them have been partially but functionally integrated into the host society, keeping some or more of their own cultural values intact. The results of this study has revealed that it has undermined the previous assumptions on the ground that the second generation Muslim migrants from South Asia would do much better in terms of improving their ‘level of social integration’ than their first generational counter parts in Melbourne. It is apparent from this study that a large section of the second generation Muslims from those six communities, have already been alienated and marginalised in the broader Australian society.
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