Evidence of Ethnic Inequality - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Evidence of Ethnic Inequality

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Title: Evidence of Ethnic Inequality


1
Evidence of Ethnic Inequality
  • An overview of writing on ethnicity and inequality

2
Facts about race
  • 7.1 of the population belongs to an ethnic
    minority
  • Most of these people live in urban areas
  • The ethnic minority population is growing faster
    than the whole society because they are generally
    younger in age.
  • The largest single group of ethnic minority
    people are Indians, followed by Pakistani and
    then Black Caribbeans.
  • Most of those who consider themselves to belong
    to an ethnic minority community are in fact,
    British because they were born in Britain.
  • They are claimed to have hybrid culture which
    is a mix of their home culture and British
    culture.

3
1965 Race Relations Act
  • This banned discrimination on the grounds of
    race, colour or ethnic or national origin in
    public places.
  • It made it illegal to incite racial hatred in
    writing.
  • It set up the Race Relations Board to respond to
    complaints.
  • These laws were clearly ineffective
  • Racism is not illegal in private and racism still
    occurs.
  • The onus is on the victim to prove that racism
    occurred.

4
The 1968 Race Relations Act
  • This extended the previous Act to include
    employment, housing and the provision of
    services.
  • There was very little discrimination ever proved,
    few cases were won, and most were related to
    advertising!
  • The Police were exempt from this Act and
    investigated themselves in cases of complaints.
  • It was generally seen as an expensive and
    toothless waste of time.

5
The 1976 Race Relations Act
  • This introduced the idea of indirect
    discrimination which mean that employers could
    not set up blinds to cover blatantly racist
    policies.
  • It set up the Commission for Racial Equality
    (CRE). See their Website at ltwww.cre.gov.ukgt.
  • There are limited resources and few prosecutions.
    It is difficult to prove that people are
    motivated by racism.
  • Race relations legislation is controversial and
    generally not especially helpful except in
    changing attitudes.

6
Immigration control
  • Many writers claim that immigration controls have
    been used unfairly to discriminate against
    non-white immigrants whereas those from Australia
    and European countries have been accepted into
    the UK without control.
  • In 1993 the Asylum and Immigration Appeals Act
    was actually designed to limit immigration and
    reduce the number of asylum seekers.
  • It acted to remove the right of appeal against
    the decision to deport people.
  • Asylum seekers also lost their right to housing.
  • There were a number of incidents which
    embarrassed the government over the
    implementation of the laws.

7
The Cantle Report
  • Race riots occurred in British cities in 2001.
  • The main rioting was in the North and associated
    with Asian communities in Bradford, Oldham and
    Burnley.
  • The Cantle Report was produced in December in
    that year.
  • It claims that there is racial segregation
    between the communities and increasing distance
    between the groups.
  • It argues for increased integration between
    groups.
  • The Home Secretary, David Blunkett suggested
  • Immigrants should learn English
  • They should take a loyalty oath to the UK

8
Unemployment
  • Official figures for January 2001 show that
    unemployment rates for ethnic minority men is
    twice that for white men.
  • The ethnic minority groups which are most likely
    to be unemployed are Black Caribbeans and Black
    Africans at nearly four times the average rate.
  • The group least likely to suffer unemployment is
    Indian men. Possibly because these are likely to
    be middle class in terms of education.
  • The trends are exaggerated in the case of women.
    Bangladeshis and Pakistanis are unemployed at a
    rate of 23.9 which is five times the average for
    all women.

9
Crime and Criminality
  • Black males are more likely to go to prison than
    all males.
  • This does not apply to all ethnic minorities
    but it does to African Caribbeans.
  • Only 0.3 judges come from ethnic minority
    backgrounds and 0.1 of senior barristers are
    black.
  • The rates of execution in the USA for non-white
    people are twice what could be expected from
    their rates of representation in the community.

10
Black crime and sociology
  • Demography blacks are younger in age
    distribution than the general population and
    rates of crime are also much higher than among
    young people.
  • Racism the police are racist. This is supported
    by the Scarman Report and the McPherson Report
    into the Stephen Lawrence case.
  • Resistance to imperialism criminality is a form
    of resistance and a political stance. This is a
    Marxist view and the evidence to support it is
    poor.
  • Marginalisation Black people are marginal to
    mainstream society and cannot achieve their
    aspirations to wealth via the normal channels
    because of the racism of society. They turn,
    therefore, to crime.

11
Michael E Brown
  • There are three types of ethnic conflict
  • Systemic conflict occurs when groups live close
    to one another. Groups may launch attacks to gain
    advantage.
  • Domestic conflict relates to groups who feel
    vulnerable and they attempt to break away from
    the more powerful people who will submerge their
    culture.
  • Perceptual explanations relate to how groups are
    trained to relate to each other.

12
John Rex
  • Rex believes racism to be based on belief
    systems.
  • Rex suggests that people justify their racist
    beliefs with dubious logic. The hate comes first,
    then the rationalisation.

13
David Mason
  • Institutional racism as a term has been used in
    five different ways
  • Conspiracy where people are seen to deliberately
    set out to discriminate.
  • Structural Marxist where the racism is a
    consequence of state policy.
  • Unintended racism results from badly designed or
    ethnocentric policies.
  • Colonial racism where minority groups take on low
    status work.
  • Political opportunism where racism policies are
    seen as popular.

14
Paul Gilroy
  • Establishing a separate cultural identity is a
    significant form of resistance to capitalism and
    to racism in imperial societies.
  • This was once done by African Caribbeans through
    dance, music, art and sport.
  • However, in post modern society, many people are
    adapting and adopting black cultural styles as a
    form of fashion.
  • It offers people a variable identity but
    disenfranchises black people from ownership of
    their own culture hence the drive to keep
    developing new styles that black people can own
    as their styles become adopted by the fashionable.

15
John Beynon 1986
  • There are eight possible causes of Inner City
    ethnic rioting
  • Unemployment
  • Deprivation
  • Racial disadvantage
  • Racial discrimination
  • Political exclusion
  • Powerlessness
  • Distrust of police
  • Hostility to police
  • It is these which cause race rioting in cities,
    though often a single event may trigger the
    actual riot.

16
Heidi Safia Mirza
  • Black women experience inequalities of gender and
    race.
  • Females work hard in school and have values of
    achievement.
  • This is because families are matriarchal and
    girls accept that they will be primary carers for
    their children.
  • Black girls are very high achievers but books on
    ethnicity do not acknowledge that male and female
    patterns of achievement are different.
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