Racism is Watch Her True Story 9 Onlinestill pervasive in Australian society, but it's alarming how many young people say they're on the receiving end of it.
Chinese Australians report the highest levels of discrimination due to their race and cultural background, according to Mission Australia's 2016 Youth Survey.
The survey of teenagers, commissioned by the charity, covers 22,000 respondents between the ages of 15 to 19 years of age.
It found 88.7 percent of Mandarin speakers reported discrimination, followed by speakers of Cantonese (80.6%) and Filipino/Tagalog (80.4%).
SEE ALSO: Discrimination runs rampant throughout the gig economy, study findsWhen it comes to young Indigenous Australians, one in five Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander respondents say they've experienced discrimination on the basis of race or cultural background, which is more than three times the number of non-Indigenous young people.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Religious discrimination was cited by 43 percent of young people who speak Arabic, followed by Filipino/Tagalog (28.6%) and Spanish (26.4%).
Half of women who reported discrimination said they did because of their gender.
"These levels are simply unacceptable and we must ask ourselves what we can all do to change these results," Catherine Yeomans, CEO Mission Australia, said in a statement.
"We have to challenge stereotypes and explicit discrimination when we see it. And this needs to be addressed by governments, businesses, sports and other institutions as well as in the media and at schools," she added.
Despite the findings, discrimination wasn't listed as the biggest concern among young Australians in the survey. Alcohol, drugs and mental health topped the list of concerns.
Mental health concerns have doubled in the last six years; with stress, school and body image having the biggest impact.
It's not always easy being a kid.
Previous:Fighting Words
Next:Eat the Press
NYT's The Mini crossword answers for February 4Apple Vision Pro drop test: Did the $3,500 headset survive the fall?Costco in Cancún by Simon WuDeath by Sea by Rosa ShipleyYou Are a Muppet by Jane BreakellRIP Billymark's by Sophie HaigneyApple Vision Pro launch day: My morning with Apple's true believers in NYCTaylor Swift's 'The Tortured Poets Department': Everything we knowThe Apple Watch Series 9 is $100 off at Amazon and WalmartEmma's Last Night by Jacqueline Feldman“What a Goddamn Writer She Was”: Remembering Alice Munro (1931–2024) by The Paris ReviewForget about Mars for a minute: Let's talk about these rad moon missionsAnacondas in the Park by Pedro LemebelLooking for hope on climate change under Trump? Cities are where the action is.The Measure of Intensities: On Luc Tuymans by Joshua CohenDoodle Nation: Notes on Distracted Drawing by Polly DicksonAnne Elliot Is TwentyChasing It Down the Elevator Shaft to the Subconscious: Or, Getting Hypnotized by Jeremy ButmanEmma's Last Night by Jacqueline FeldmanAnacondas in the Park by Pedro Lemebel On the Road: The Loneliness of the Long Jenny Holzer Projects Poems onto Buildings Watch Gabrielle Bell Discuss Her Early Comics Watch J. Robert Lennon Discuss His First Novel William Pope.L and the Black Flâneur Malthusian Flotsam and Unspeakable Jetsam, and Other News by Dan Piepenbring On Morbid Sensitivity One Month Only: Subscribe to The Paris Review & Lucky Peach Poem: Nin Andrews, “The Artichoke” Today in Twenty Samantha Hahn’s Beautiful Illustrations for Rachel Cusk’s “Outline” Darwin’s Kids Doodled All Over the “Origin of Species” Manuscript “A Major Poet of Quiet”: Ben Lerner on Keith Waldrop Watch: Tao Lin Recalls Writing His First Story Collection Who Hears the Hum, and Why? Whiting Awards 2016: Brian Blanchfield, Nonfiction Whiting Awards 2016: J. D. Daniels, nonfiction When Women Starred in Action Movies: Serial Queens of the 1910s The Rediscovered Prison Memoir of a Black Man in the 1850s Whiting Awards 2016: Madeleine George, Drama
2.1614s , 8199.0625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Her True Story 9 Online】,Co-creation Information Network