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Diversity Reduces Community Fears – Study


16 August 2017 at 11:43 am
Lina Caneva
People living in more diverse suburbs are less likely to express or experience Islamophobia, according to new RMIT research.


Lina Caneva | 16 August 2017 at 11:43 am


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Diversity Reduces Community Fears – Study
16 August 2017 at 11:43 am

People living in more diverse suburbs are less likely to express or experience Islamophobia, according to new RMIT research.

The study led by Associate Professor Val Colic-Peisker and Associate Professor Karien Dekker examined whether the religious visibility of Muslim residents had an impact on local community cohesion and Islamophobia.

“The data, collected through a survey of residents and follow-up in-depth interviews suggest that the significant presence of ‘visible Muslims’ does not predict Islamophobia in areas where Muslim residents daily rub shoulders with non-Muslims,” Colic-Peisker said.

“The study confirms the suggestion of the ‘contact theory’: that direct social interaction with minority groups leads to the diminishing of prejudice against them.”

A team of researchers, including seven bi-lingual interviewers, focused on the neighbourhood experience of people living in Fawkner and Broadmeadows, two relatively disadvantaged suburbs in Melbourne’s north where many Muslims live.

“Low socio-economic indicators for an area seem to be a stronger predictor of prejudice against Muslims than their visible local presence,” Colic-Peisker said.

“On the individual level, respondents with lower socioeconomic status and older respondents tended to be more Islamophobic, which confirms findings of other Australian and overseas studies.”

The report said respondents with more diverse local social networks expressed significantly lower levels of Islamophobia.  

Overall, the neighbourhood experiences of Muslim and non-Muslim residents in both localities were positive. This was especially so for local Muslims, who liked their suburbs, interacted with their diverse neighbours and felt accepted and safe in their local areas.

“Despite a generally positive sentiment, we found that ‘visible’ Muslim women often felt at risk outside their suburbs, where there was a higher likelihood of Islamophobic incidents,” Dekker said.

Public transport has been identified as a threatening setting for Muslim women.

The report said public transport and car parks were the most common places where abuse was directed at visibly Muslim women.

These were also places Muslim women were most fearful about.

The data indicated that most non-Muslims in the two suburbs considered Muslim visibility unremarkable. However, two-thirds of non-Muslim respondents and 28 per cent of Muslim respondents were uncomfortable about face covering worn by some Muslim women.

Rather than being an expression of Islamophobia, this was an expression of concern that the “veil” precluded interaction with the women, the report said.

“While local governments successfully run community development and other programs, it seems that focusing the efforts on further strengthening English language and employment programs for migrants in the diverse, relatively disadvantaged areas, may be the most beneficial for the wider community,” Dekker said.

The study called Religious Visibility, Disadvantage and Bridging Social Capital, was conducted in collaboration with the Islamic Council of Victoria and Moreland and Hume city councils.


Lina Caneva  |  Editor  |  @ProBonoNews

Lina Caneva has been a journalist for more than 35 years. She was the editor of Pro Bono Australia News from when it was founded in 2000 until 2018.


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