| The 2001 census allowed Australians, approaching twenty million strong, to declare what ancestry they considered themselves to be. This subjective assessment allowed people to define what ethic group they see themselves as belonging - a Malaysian-born Chinese with Australian citizenship might see themselves as Chinese first, Australian second and Malaysian third. Ethnic backgrounds that straddled different countries (eg: Jewish, Kurdish) could be included. People could nominate upto two ancestries.
The most commonly declared ancestries were :
Australian (6.7 million; 99% Australian born)
English (6.4 million; 82% Australian born, 13% English born)
Irish (1.9 million)
Italian (800,000)
German (742,000)
Chinese (557,000; 25% Australian born, 24% PRC born, 11% Hong Kong born)
Scottish (540,000)
Ancestries nominated by 150,000 to 499,999 Australians included:
Greek Dutch Lebanese Indian Vietnamese Polish
Ancestries nominated by 50,000 to 149,999 Australians included:
Maltese Filipino New Zealander Croatian Serbian Australian Aboriginal Welsh Macedonian French Spanish Maori Hungarian Russian Sinhalese Turkish South African
Ancestries nominated by 20,000 to 49,999 Australians included:
American Korean Danish Austrian Portuguese Ukrainian Japanese Indonesian Samoan Egyptian Swedish Jewish Swiss Chilean Khmer Thai Canadian
Ancestries nominated by 10,000 to 19,999 Australians included:
Latvian Iranian Assyrian/Chaldean Malay Finnish Bosnian Mauritian Norwegian Czech Fijian Romanian Tongan Armenian Slovene Pakistani Afghan Anglo-Indian Lithuanian Iraqi Burmese Albanian Syrian Lao
Ancestries nominated by 5,000 to 9,999 Australians included:
Torres Strait Islander Bengali Papua New Guinean Cook Islander Tamil Estonian Slovak Palestinian Salvadoran Argentinian Timorese Uruguayan Somali
Ancestries nominated by 2,500 to 4,999 Australians included: Peruvian Kurdish Taiwanese Bulgarian Sudanese Brazilian Colombian Australian South Sea Islander Coptic Ethiopian Nepalese Zimbabwean Jordanian Hispanic
There were seventy other ancestries that comprised of upto 2,500 respondants. The Australian Bureau of Statistics has not declared if they included Jedis caused by the the campaign to have Jedi registered as a religion through the national census.
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