Almost half of Australians think immigration is too high while financial pressures are ‘stubbornly common’, annual Mapping Social Cohesion survey finds
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Australia’s social cohesion is proving resilient against financial pressures and anxiety about Middle East unrest but fraying around the issue of immigration, with almost half the population believing it is too high, according to detailed new research.
The Scanlon Foundation Research Institute’s annual survey, Mapping Social Cohesion, measures participants’ sense of belonging, worth, inclusion and justice, political participation, and acceptance and rejection, to form a cohesion index and produce a numerical benchmark that can be compared year on year.