Sunday, 12 November 2023

Australians aren’t joining in any more – and it appears to be having big political consequences.

Extract from The Guardian

 Australians are not joining or taking part in local sports clubs, religious organisations or political parties at the previous rate

Australians are not joining or taking part in local sports clubs, religious organisations or political parties at the previous rate.

Participation in social, community and civic groups fell by between eight and 10 percentage points between 2006 and 2019.


Data journalist
Sun 12 Nov 2023 06.00 AEDTLast modified on Sun 12 Nov 2023 06.02 AEDT
Australians, like many around the world, seem to be becoming more civically and politically detached.

We don’t join or participate in local sports clubs, religious organisations or political parties at anything like the rate we used to.

And this atomisation appears to be having political consequences – final polling in the Indigenous voice to parliament referendum showed large differences in voting intention by whether people were a member of social and civic organisations.

So what does the data show about Australians, and is anything replacing the connections and engagement lost from these community groups?

Prof Ariadne Vromen from the Australian National University says membership of these kinds of organisations has been declining for years. But people are also engaging in more ad hoc ways, such as through petitions or donations.

Participation in social, community and civic groups fell by between eight and 10 percentage points between large surveys conducted between 2006 and 2019. It was even lower in a 2020 survey, but this was likely affected by the Covid pandemic.

Almost two-thirds of Australians were members of social groups in 2006 – including sports, religious or hobby groups – but that is now about half. Only about a quarter are members of community groups such as local service clubs and emergency services. Less than 10% are members of political groups, which include trade unions.

Researchers look at this kind of membership because it’s a “proxy for forms of collective action and community building”, Vromen says.

“It’s the idea that if we join with others who are either like-minded or have similar lived experiences that we can think about something bigger than ourselves, and we can work together for either, you know, the good society, or we can lobby together for some sort of social or political change.”

The decline is particularly clear in union membership. In the 1970s, more than half of Australians were members of trade unions. This had slipped to just over 40% in the 1990s. It is now in the low teens.

Trade union membership is much higher in certain industries, among professionals and those with higher levels of education. Vromen says that, traditionally, membership in social and civic groups has tended to skew higher in those more educated.

Despite declining participation in groups, Australians are still engaging in civic activity, just in different ways, according to Vromen.

“People have moved away from traditional modes [of engagement] that are based on membership,” Vromen says. “It is membership [itself] that has diminished.”

There are a number of reasons for this, including that because of casualisation and women’s job participation, we face a much different labour market. But the internet, and especially social media and petition platforms such as change.org, let people organise around specific issues or events.

“People [now] have ad hoc involvements based on particular issues or events or campaigns that draw them in” Vromen says. “They might just be involved for a short period of time and then they drop out again.”

Vromen and her colleagues commissioned a survey of 5,300 people by polling firm YouGov but have not yet published the results. It found solid majorities across age groups have signed petitions or donated to social, humanitarian or charitable organisations.

By comparison, more than half of respondents in every age group said they would never attend the meeting of a political party and more than two-thirds said they would never donate to a political party.

There are also notable patterns across age groups, with more than 64% of those over 65 saying they have never and will never attend a protest or demonstration. Just 42% of those younger than 35 said the same.

“Usually the whole story is about apathetic, young people,” Vromen says. “Our data doesn’t show that at all. It shows very actively engaged young people.”

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