Kiribati New Zealanders

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kiribati New Zealanders
Total population
Kiribati
4,659 (2023 Census)[1]
Regions with significant populations
Auckland · Canterbury  · Otago and Southland · Waikato · Wellington
Languages
New Zealand English · Gilbertese
Religion
Majority Christian

Kiribati New Zealanders refers to New Zealand citizens or permanent residents or others with rights to reside pending move to permanent residency (e.g., by virtue of the Pacific Access Category of immigration (PAC)) who are fully or partially of I-Kiribati descent. According to the 2023 census, 4,659 New Zealanders declared their ethnicity as Kiribati.[1] At present, there may be up to another 1,000 I-Kiribati in New Zealand on guestworker schemes such as the Recognised Seasonal Employment Scheme (RSE). This number has been down since the Covid-19 disruption but is recovering slowly. The Kiribati end of this circular migration was also affected by this disruption.

I-Kiribati people are classified as a subset of Pasifika New Zealanders under the Ethnicity New Zealand Standard Classification by Stats NZ Tatauranga Aotearoa.[2] According to the 2006 Census, there were 1,116 Kiribati New Zealanders in New Zealand; this has since quadrupled, including through further immigration and through procreation.

As of 2023, 58.4% of Kiribati New Zealanders were born in Kiribati itself or elsewhere, and so only 41.6% of Kiribati New Zealanders were born in New Zealand.[1] The born elsewhere include people from Australia, Solomon Islands, Fiji, United States and United Kingdom.

41.8% of New Zealand residents who declared their ethnicity as I-Kiribati live in the Auckland Region. The Kiribati community is especially prominent in the country town of Warkworth, where Gilbertese is the second most spoken language. Smaller I-Kiribati communities exist on the North Island | Te Ika-a-Māui in the Waikato region, Hawke Bay and in Wellington, while communities on the South Island | Te Waipounamu. in Marllborough, Canterbury, Otago and Southland are even smaller, but all are growing faster than Auckland.[3]

Organisations

Connections between Kiribati and New Zealand

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI