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CHANGING IDENTIFICATION BY GEOGRAPHY
The states and territories with the highest proportions of consistently identified people were:
These states and territories also had relatively low proportions of people who were newly identified. The states and territories with the highest proportions of people who were newly identified in 2016 were:
This aligns with the observed increase in Census counts in these states and territories between 2011 and 201613 that could not be explained solely by demographic factors. These states and territories also have a higher proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people living in Major Cities and Regional areas than the states and territories with a high proportion of consistently identified people13.
(b) Place of Usual Residence in 2016. (c) Includes Other Territories. (d) Includes persons who identified in 2016 and 2006. For further detail, see Table 2 in the data cube titled 'ACLD 2006-2011-2016 Identification as an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander person in the Census over time'. Note: Cells in this table have been randomly adjusted to avoid the release of confidential data. Discrepancies may occur between sums of the component items and totals. Source: ABS 2019, Microdata: Australian Census Longitudinal Dataset, ACLD, cat no. 2080.0, ABS Canberra People living in Major Cities in 2016 were the most likely to change their identification. Nearly half (45%) of people living in Major Cities who have ever identified as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander changed their identification between 2006 and 2016. In Regional Australia, 35% of people who have ever identified as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander changed their identification. This is consistent with observed increases in the count of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Major Cities and Regional Australia in the 2011 and 2016 Censuses13. 3.2 Consistency of identification as an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander person by Remoteness area, 2006-2016(a)(b)
(b) Place of Usual Residence in 2016. (c) Includes persons who identified in 2016 and 2006. (d) Includes Inner Regional Australia and Outer Regional Australia. (e) Includes Remote and Very remote Australia. (f) Includes people who moved to/from a migratory-offshore-shipping or no usual address area. For further detail, see Table 4 in the data cube titled 'ACLD 2006-2011-2016 Identification as an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander person in the Census over time'. Note: Cells in this table have been randomly adjusted to avoid the release of confidential data. Discrepancies may occur between sums of the component items and totals. Source: ABS 2019, Microdata: Australian Census Longitudinal Dataset, ACLD, cat no. 2080.0, ABS Canberra. REFERENCES 13 ABS 2018, Census of Population and Housing: Understanding the Increase in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Counts, 2016, cat. no. 2077.0, ABS, Canberra.
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