4155.0 - National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Survey: Social Atlas, 1994
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 20/03/1997
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MEDIA RELEASE
New ABS Social Atlas of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People Less than 20 per cent of Indigenous people in northern and central Australia say English is their main language. This is one characteristic detailed in a social atlas of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people which was released today by the Australian Bureau of Statistics. The atlas includes 45 maps which present characteristics of the Indigenous population drawing on data from the 1994 National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Survey and other sources. The maps show data for a number of broad categories: population, family and culture, health, health risk factors, housing, education, employment and income, and law and justice. The statistics are based on several types of data, ranging from stated perceptions and attitudes, to reported conditions and actions, to actual measurements. Each map shows comparisons of data across the 35 ATSIC regions and the Torres Strait Area and will be useful for researchers, policy makers and service providers interested in making regional comparisons or quickly finding areas which have relatively high or low values. Selected data from the atlas shows:
The 1994 National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Survey - Social Atlas (cat. no. 4155.0) is available from ABS bookshops. Document Selection These documents will be presented in a new window.
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