Cultural diversity
Ancestry
About this topic
Ancestry describes a person's cultural association and ethnic background, and Census respondents can report more than one ancestry. It is a broader cultural measure than country of birth because it can reflect family heritage across generations.
This topic helps show the size and diversity of cultural groups in an area, including groups whose members were born in Australia. Because multiple ancestries can be reported, ancestry totals can exceed the total population, so it is best read with birthplace, language used at home, and religion.
Interpretation notes
- People can report up to two ancestries, so category counts represent responses rather than a single unduplicated person count, while percentages are shown against the total population.
- ABS advises that ancestry is best used with birthplace and language, because ancestry alone is a broad measure of ethnicity and cultural background.
- The 2021 form added separate Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander mark boxes, so those categories need caution in over-time comparison.
Key insight
In 2021, the largest ancestry groups among residents in Emerton were English, Australian and Australian Aboriginal.
Section overview
Ancestry - Ranked by size
Emerton - Total persons (Usual residence)
This table summarises ancestry for Emerton in 2021 for persons, with comparison against Blacktown (C) and change since 2016.
Ancestry - Ranked by size snapshot
2021 distribution by category for Emerton, with comparison markers for Blacktown (C).
English
Australian
Australian Aboriginal
Samoan
Filipino
Irish
Cook Islander
Tongan
Scottish
Maori
Chart view
Ancestry - Ranked by size change
Absolute change in category counts between 2016 and 2021.
English
-25
-1.6pp
Australian
-177
-8.3pp
Australian Aboriginal
+165
+7.2pp
Samoan
-18
-1.0pp
Filipino
+29
+1.1pp
Irish
+9
+0.3pp
Cook Islander
+31
+1.3pp
Tongan
+18
+0.7pp
Scottish
-10
-0.5pp
Maori
-9
-0.4pp
Data table
Ancestry for Emerton. Ancestry - Ranked by size. 2021 and 2016 counts, percentages, and change compared with Blacktown (C).
| Category | 2021 | 2016 | Change | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Count | % | Blacktown (C)% | Count | % | Blacktown (C)% | Count | pp | |
| English | 549 | 23.9% | 16.8% | 574 | 25.5% | 20.7% | -25 | -1.6pp |
| Australian | 483 | 21.0% | 19.1% | 660 | 29.3% | 22.8% | -177 | -8.3pp |
| Australian Aboriginal | 197 | 8.6% | 2.7% | 32 | 1.4% | 0.4% | +165 | +7.2pp |
| Samoan | 168 | 7.3% | 1.8% | 186 | 8.3% | 1.7% | -18 | -1.0pp |
| Filipino | 152 | 6.6% | 9.0% | 123 | 5.5% | 8.9% | +29 | +1.1pp |
| Irish | 128 | 5.6% | 4.2% | 119 | 5.3% | 5.7% | +9 | +0.3pp |
| Cook Islander | 122 | 5.3% | 0.4% | 91 | 4.0% | 0.4% | +31 | +1.3pp |
| Tongan | 85 | 3.7% | 1.1% | 67 | 3.0% | 1.0% | +18 | +0.7pp |
| Scottish | 59 | 2.6% | 3.5% | 69 | 3.1% | 4.4% | -10 | -0.5pp |
| Maori | 46 | 2.0% | 1.1% | 55 | 2.4% | 1.1% | -9 | -0.4pp |
Excludes ancestries with fewer than 10 responses (multi-response).