Contemporary Irish migration to Australia: pathways to permanence
Date
2018
Authors
Breen, Fidelma
Editors
Advisors
Rudd, Dianne M.
Barrie, Helen
Reilly, Alexander Peter
Barrie, Helen
Reilly, Alexander Peter
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Theses
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Abstract
This thesis investigates the experiences of contemporary Irish migrants in Australia by exploring
migration, settlement and return migration amongst the research project’s respondents. The recent
period is important because it encompassed both a technological revolution in the growth, availability
and affordability of travel and communications technology and because it saw an increase in the Irish
population in Australia, of 39 per cent, from 2006 to 2014. Since the mid-1990s there has been a
major shift in immigration policy whereby concentration on permanent migration, particularly the
family unit, has been replaced with a proliferation of visa classes that promote temporary entry in line
with global trends. Significant changes, such as the introduction of the 457 visa and the extension of
the Working Holiday Maker (WHM) visa, have meant that the temporary intake has become more
prominent. These changes also encouraged an investigation of the migration experiences of Irish
people to Australia as these visas, despite being elements of the temporary visa programme,
permitted a pathway to permanent residency in Australia.
This mixed methods study was conducted through two surveys (n=1,560) disseminated through social
media platforms and in-depth participant interviews (n=67). Findings were benchmarked against
secondary data from national data agencies and the Émigré study, University College Cork, Ireland.
The surveys allowed Irish people resident in Australia and those who had left to describe their visa use,
migration motivation and settlement experience.
Results found that the majority of immigrants entered Australia on a temporary, long-stay visa, and
most did not intend to settle permanently in Australia. This intention changed quite rapidly after
arrival and most WHMs transitioned to a 457 visa as the most typical ‘next step’ on the pathway to
permanent residency. New Irish arrivals tended to seek out Irish friendship groups or socialise with
other migrants and this was ascribed to three things: cultural comfort provided by other Irish people,
experiential similarities with other migrants and the perception that Australians had long-established
friendship groups which were difficult to penetrate. Contemporary Irish migrants were a ‘good fit’ for
Australia’s labour market and career progression was one of the most notable benefits of migration.
However, increased satisfaction with job, salary and career prospects post-migration did not prevent
some respondents choosing to leave Australia. The majority of those who departed returned to
Ireland, with departure usually family motivated: migrants either wanted to be nearer ageing parents
or wanted their children to experience a childhood similar to their own close to extended family
members. Analysis showed a high level of engagement during migration through mobile technology
with family, local community and with regional and national political, economic and social
developments in Ireland.
Methodologically, this study contributes to the emerging and growing field of research using and
investigating social media. Theoretically, this research demonstrates two migration theory threads at
play for the recent Irish immigrant cohort in Australia – one related to the process of migration which adheres closely, but not perfectly, to Neoclassical II economic theory and another, a cultural migration
process, related to transnationalism. This thesis expands our understanding of transnationalism
amongst the Irish in Australia where more recent migrants have enacted a strong trend towards
‘transnationalism from the ground up’ in their use of multi-level connections to Ireland locally,
regionally and nationally through electronic media and other online fora. Exploration of the empirical
data demonstrates a strong need to participate even virtually in life in Ireland and further, a keen
awareness of everyday happenings which was not available to migrants in pre-internet times. In this
context, transnationalism and transnational practice has the potential to become more prevalent for
first and deeper generations of the Irish diaspora.
Overall, since 2000, the contemporary Irish migrant experience in Australia has been a strongly
positive one. The significance of the findings lies predominantly in the visa used to enter Australia.
The rapid transition to a longer-term visa and ultimately to permanent residency suggests that visa
use was dictated by expediency rather than design. Even those who entered on a permanent visa did
not always intend to settle in Australia. Recent changes to Australia’s temporary visa programme,
namely the replacement of the 457 visa with the Temporary Skills Shortage (TSS) visa will likely lead to
different outcomes in the future.
School/Discipline
School of Social Sciences
Dissertation Note
Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Social Sciences, 2018
Provenance
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