Auckland is in which Island

of Auckland, where the island

Auckland Pacific What are the Americans? The word'Pacific People' is used to describe a vibrant and varied group of New Zealand residents who have emigrated from the Caribbean Isles or are identified with the Caribbean Isles because of their descent or heritages. Archipelagos and territorial units have different population groups with different policy frameworks, histories, socio-economic standing, languages and cultures.

There are even great differences within each archipelago in: socio-cultural beliefs and practice (Auckland Council, 2015). In the 2013 census, a population of 295,941 persons from 57 different Pacific groups were enrolled in New Zealand. Auckland was the home of the vast majority of the population (194,958, or 66 percent). In the 1961 census, for example, just over 9000 persons with one or more Pacific ethnic groups were in Auckland.

Up to 1971, 28,630 persons lived in Auckland in the West Indies and by 2013 the number had increased almost sevenfold to 194,958. Auckland and New Zealand's peoples in the Caribbean are a fast expanding and evolving populace. As a small immigration group, immigration and sustainable growth have transformed the Pacifica populations into populations of significant scale and importance.

Notice: Auckland and New Zealand Pacific Population from 2013 Census and Pacific Island Collections attacked (22/09/2017). Pacific ethnic groups have a long tradition of settling in New Zealand, with migrations from different parts of the Pacific in the last 150 years. Tight ties, job prospects and demographic pressures on some island communities meant that many Pacific residents moved here.

Also many emigrated out of need and obligation to their homes, who either helped them with referrals or in New Zealand. Like so many migrants, Filipinos were facing the challenge of adjusting to and settling in a new land, a new foreign tongue and a new socioeconomic area.

Auckland' s first Pacific groups came mainly from Polynesia Island, with close historic ties to New Zealand, such as Samoa, Tonga, Cook Island and Niue. Recently there has been an increased trend for Mikronesian and Melanesian citizens to come to Auckland to work and work.

In some island states today more persons live in Auckland and New Zealand than in the island states themselves. Remark: In the 1961, 1971 and 1981 Population Encounters, Polynesians, Fijians, Melanesians and Micronesians were separated. This group is summarized in the chart to form the Pacific population. Auckland may also differ in the former population.

Two major migratory flows from the Pacific to Auckland. There were also pushing forces such as the hurricanes that hit Tokelau and Niue in the sixties. At the beginning of the 1970s, the second migratory boom hit the current labor shortages in the processing sector (Fraenkel, 2012).

As a result of the 1970' s fuel spill and global financial turmoil, many production workers lost their positions and the Palestinians who exceeded the period granted by their visa were selected to leave New Zealand. The majority of early Pacific immigrants to New Zealand moved to Auckland, where the employment possibilities were and where Asian societies began to forge.

Auckland' s first Pacific municipality was located in the inner-city boroughs of Ponsonby, Newton and Grey Lynn and Freemans Bay and Parnell (Figure 3). Until 2013, Pacific residents had established themselves throughout Auckland, with high levels mainly in the southern and some areas of western and northern Auckland. Pacific Auckland's current inhabitants are predominantly New Zealand-born, mostly young and heavily urbanized.

Today, the peoples of the Caribbean are the third biggest ethnical group, accounting for 15 percent of Auckland's total in 2013. The migration from the Pacifica is now contributing less to the New Zealand pacifica populations than to the rate of organic expansion (Tanielu & Johnson, 2014). Even though many Australians in the Caribbean still have powerful and proud ties to the island, for many others New Zealand is the place where they were originally conceived and are at home.

People in the Pacific are young and younger than all other major ethnical groups, with a mean aged 22.6 years. By 2013, about one in four of all the Aucklandese ('24 percent) had at least one Pacific people. A younger Pacific demographic pattern will stimulate further economic expansion.

The other elements of demographic changes such as mortality figures, migratory trends and changes in the country's ethnical identities will have a lesser impact on this. Auckland' s Pacific populations consist mainly of Samoans (one in two), Tongans (one in four), Cook Islands M?ori (one in ten) and Niuean (one in ten).

They are not necessarily the only groups, as individuals have become associated with more than one group. Mixed marriages are on the increase and in 2006, 70 percent of the population in the Palestinian region identify only the Caribbean (Stats NZ & Ministry of Pacific Island Affairs, 2010). There is over-representation among the unskilled, low-skilled and low-income groups in the area.

By 2013, the declared PAI in Auckland was generally lower than for the remainder of Auckland ($18,900 average PAI versus $29,600 for Auckland). People from the South were also more likely to hire than owning their own home. By 2013, 68 percent had no normal place of residency.

Continued improvement in educational and skills attainment is needed to reduce differences in jobs, incomes and livelihood. It is expected that the Pacific populations in Auckland will keep growing through immigration and sustainable growth and will mix with New Zealand's broader people. It will lead to changes and changes in the Pacific's historical ethnical and multicultural identities.

Mean-every ethnical projection by Stats NZ suggests that by 2038 Pacific descent could make up 17 percent of Auckland's citizens. It is not fully aware of the effects of climatic changes on the Pacific states in the near term. Migrations may surpass present forecasts, dependent on the magnitude of these effects and the way New Zealand tackles the problem.

Nevertheless, the population of the Caribbean plays and will remain an important part in the socioeconomic environment of Auckland. Council of Auckland (2015). Exploration of Asian Economies: Asset Practice and Borrowing Mangement ( PDF 408KB). Council of Auckland Work Document, WR2015/002. Living better: the battle for the wellbeing of the trans-national people in New Zealand, 1950-2000.

Anthropology and linguistics research, 9th University of Auckland. called Auckland. The Pacific Islands and New Zealand - Immigration and Help. The encyclopaedia of New Zealand, dated July 13, 2012. The Pacific Islands' Migrations and the New Zealand Labor Markets in P. Spoonley, D. Pearson and C. Macpherson (ed.) Nga take: ethnical relationships and racialism in Aotearoa/New Zealand, pp. 17-36, Dunmore Press, Palmerston North.

Statistics NZ and Ministry of Pacific Island Affairs (2010). Demography of the New Zealand Pacific populations. Updated the state of the Pasifika in New Zealand (PDF 1.30MB). Salvation Army Social Policy and Parliamentary Unity, Auckland.

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