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Contested Spaces in Multiethnic Britain

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over minority group recognition and the right to have a voice ... Cantle's key conclusions (2001) ... Media headlines following the Cantle report, 2001 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Contested Spaces in Multiethnic Britain


1

Social Spaces in the City Community, Identity
and Difference
  • Contested Spaces in Multi-ethnic Britain

2
Contested spaces
  • Cities are spaces where we see struggles
  • between groups over space and territory
  • over minority group recognition and the right to
    have a voice
  • over power and access to resources
  • Todays lecture
  • struggles that erupt into overt conflict - the
    northern urban disturbances in 2001

3
Contested spaces contested citizenship
  • Citizenship rights (cf. Marshall (1950))
  • Civil or legal e.g. equality under law
  • Political e.g. right to vote
  • Social rights e.g. access to welfare
  • But do all groups feel like full citizens or
    that they belong, even when they have these
    rights?
  • cf. concepts of social exclusion and otherness

4
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5
Bradford, Burnley and Oldham - common factors
underlying the urban unrest
  • formerly prosperous mill towns
  • de-industrialisation leading to economic
    restructuring and decline
  • riots were preceded by extreme right-wing
    agitation

Burnley
6
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7
Racial tensions in Bradford
  • Competition over welfare resources e.g. urban
    regeneration funds
  • Fights between Asian and white gangs over
    territory
  • Tensions between Asians and the police
  • Riots in the Manningham area

8
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9
Explanations?
frustration and deprivation?
criminality?
10
The reasons for rioting
  • Scarmans key conclusions (1981)
  • high levels of multiple deprivation, leading to
    social and economic stress
  • a sense of disillusionment, especially amongst
    young people who feel excluded
  • triggering factors (e.g. insensitive policing
    racist behaviour)
  • Cantles key conclusions (2001)
  • social polarisation and ethnic segregation,
    reflecting parallel lives
  • fear and misunderstandings between groups

11
Media headlines following the Cantle report, 2001
12
Tackling parallel lives - the community
cohesion agenda
  • Reflects inter-related worries about
  • geographical segregation of ethnic minority
    groups - a sign of non-belonging?
  • social isolationism and self-segregation
  • community breakdown
  • the potential for new conflict at the
    neighbourhood level

13
Community cohesion the critique
  • minority ethnic communities blamed for their own
    exclusion from mainstream society.
  • emphasis on cultural differences
  • constraints down-played
  • the voluntary clustering of households need not
    necessarily be problematic in itself
  • social integration does not necessarily depend on
    residential integration
  • community is a contested concept (cf. Young
    1990)
  • source of social capital and support , or
  • intolerant of difference and exclusionary

14
Conclusions
  • Urban unrest has a clear geography, reflecting
    the importance of social and geographical context
  • Latent social conflicts can become manifest when
    triggered by certain events
  • Social problems are socially constructed. They
    arise when communities with different values and
    allegiances are at odds with the dominant moral
    order.
  • Difference and otherness challenge the idea
    of community as inclusive
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