New Zealanders living across the Ditch are the least likely migrants to identify themselves as being "Australian", a new study has found.
And it found that although most Australians support multiculturalism and recent migrants are positive about life there, there are "occasional pockets" of community dissatisfaction where new migrants report being subjected to racism.
The findings come in the latest Mapping Social Cohesion Research, written by Monash University's Professor Andrew Markus and produced by the Scanlon Foundation.
It is Australia's largest study of social cohesion, attitudes to immigration and cultural diversity.
Immigrants, the study concluded, tend to embrace multiple identities: six out of 10 considered themselves as "world citizens" as well as Australians, and also identified with their country of birth.