“…The social networks they establish and maintain, via the dominant language of the community, have significant implications for their social inclusion. Yates's (2011) research in Australia, for example, found that some migrants existed in "ethnic bubbles" (she cites the use of this term in a study by Colic- [2002] of the experiences of cultural and emotional integration, or the lack thereof, of Croatian migrants in Western Australia), whereby they found refuge (security, affiliation, safety) within their own ethnic group's social networks. They did not seek social connections beyond these networks, and so felt disaffiliated from the broader English-speaking society.…”