The original 2004 posting of this material is still on my old website, here. Other articles dealing with cross-cultures: “Cultural Operating Systems – Thoughts on Designing Cultures“, 2010; Ethnicity and Racism – Stirring the Pot, 2005; “Korean, American and Other Strange Habits – You Do It Your Way – two books reviewed“, 2003; “When Is It Rude To Be Rude? – Politeness Across Cultures and Subcultures“, 2001; Individualism or the Group“,2001; “The Price of Freedom – an Escape from Vietnam“, 1984
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The Secretariat
Senate Legal and Constitutional Committee
Room S1.61, Parliament House
Canberra ACT 2600
AUSTRALIA
Telephone: (02) 6277 3560
Fax: (02) 6277 5794
E-mail: legcon.sen@aph.gov.au
Senate Inquiry on the Status of Australian Expatriates, 2004
submission author : Thor May, South Korea
This short submission has several elements:
a) It puts forward a view of what it is to be ‘an Australian’, and hence what it may mean to be an expatriate Australian. The view expressed might be somewhat at variance with the normal assumptions of nationality, and hence the premises which a Legal and Constitutional Committee could bring to bear on the status of Australian expatriates.
b) It outlines my own circumstance (at various points in the paper), as a particular instance of an expatriate Australian. This includes some suggestion of why I became an expatriate, and why I continue to be one.
c) It indicates why an individual such as myself can make a greater contribution to general Australian prosperity and security by contributing as an expatriate rather than as an Australian domestic resident.
d) It itemizes several handicaps in the Australian civil context encountered by expatriates such as myself.
1. The Concepts of Nationality and Culture