Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
A multicultural society is one where a number of different ethnic groups and their culture live alongside the predominant indigenous ethnic group and their culture.
An individual can have range of identities based on their personal experience and history, they can show allegiance to more than one group. What identities does Ed Husain have?
"But supporting a team is not the true test of being English. It's about the country you consider your home, the place where you will raise your kids. I'm very proud to support the England football and cricket teams but I don't believe that is the defining element of your national identity."
Shahid Malik, International Development Minister
Caribbean: 254,740
USA: 155,030 Bangladesh: 154,201 South Africa: 140,201
Kenya: 129,356
Italy: 107,002
"Being British is about driving in a German car to an Irish pub for a Belgian beer, then travelling home, grabbing an Indian curry or a Turkish kebab on the way, to sit on Swedish furniture and watch American shows on a Japanese TV. And the most British thing of all? Suspicion of anything foreign ". Anonymous
Automated pre 1066 A succession of invading forces brought new people and their cultures to what is modern-day Britain. These included the Romans, Jutes, Angles, Saxons and Vikings 1685 Religious persecution forces 100,000 Huguenots (French Protestants) to leave France for Britain
1066 The Normans invade Britain and become the dominant force. Their legacy laid the foundations of the Britain we live in today
1840s Widespread famine forces thousands of people to leave Ireland. Many come to Britain
1848 With a spate of revolutions breaking out in mainland Europe, Britain becomes the destination of choice for many refugees
1914 - 1918 The First World War creates huge numbers of refugees, many of whom choose to escape mainland Europe and come to Britain
1880s Fleeing oppression in Europe, hundreds of thousands of Jews seek sanctuary in Britain
1939 - 1945 Again with the outbreak of the Second World War, refugees seek to escape Nazi rule and the fighting by travelling to the UK
1946 Hundreds of thousands of people from across Eastern Europe seek refuge in the UK following the establishment of Communism
1972 28,000 Ugandan Asians settle in the UK after being expelled from Uganda
1948 Many West Indians decide to settle in Britain, which needs to boost its depleted workforce after WW2
1975 Political unrest and war in South-East Asia results in many seeking a new life in Britain
1980s Attracted by opportunities for those with specialist skills and professional training, large numbers of Australians, New Zealanders and South Africans move to the UK
1998 - 2002 During these years 45,000 people arrive from Africa, 22,700 from the Indian subcontinent and 25,000 from Asia
1992 - 1998 Ethnic disputes in the Balkans force thousands to seek refuge in Western Europe. Many seek asylum in the UK
2002+ Asylum seekers from Afghanistan and Iraq, economic migrants from Eastern Europe due to E.U. enlargement.
The Treaty of Rome means that all citizens of E.U. countries have the legal right to work and settle here.
A rebranded Jack.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/2981038.stm
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=273
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/census2001/profiles/17UG-A.asp
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/1990118.stm
Van De Sar
Anderson
Beardsley
Neville
Evra
Hargreaves
Ronaldo
Saha
Vidic
Tevez
Trevor Philips
Commission for Equality and Human Rights.
Well, I think the answer is this, the fact that we are a multicultural society is it just that, it is a fact and it has been for 2,000 years, that's the nature of Britishness, that's why it's such a capacious accommodating identity. The problem is that if you put that into practice in a certain way, what you end up doing is separating people, and what I discovered when I became chair of the CRE three years ago was that too many public authorities particularly were taking diversity to a point where they were saying, 'actually we're going to reward you for being different, we're going to give you a community centre only if you are Pakistani or African Caribbean and so on, but we're not going to encourage you to be part of the community of our town.'
He told the congregation: "Together we can make a Britain in which many minority ethnic people will feel it is their dwelling tent too - without making the indigenous population feel that this is no longer the Britain of their fathers. "Today, there is a great deal of talk about social inclusion and community cohesion. "But surely we must go beyond inclusion and cohesion to a vision of true humanity as we see it in the face of Jesus Christ. "I believe we should talk more about the common good and the values that have shaped this nation and less and less about multi-culturalism and cultural diversity.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/englan d/north_yorkshire/6210431.stm
Benefits
1 Ethnic groups integrate into wider society. They begin to influence the dominant culture of the country, the culture evolves over time and cultural fusion occurs. The so called melting pot idea. This process continues over time as new ethnic groups enter the country.
2 The ethnic groups integrate into society, they retain their own culture, whilst adopting, or some aspects of, the dominant culture of the country, people have multiple identities. The ethnic groups live alongside the indigenous population called cultural pluralism.
Ethnic groups do not integrate into wider society, they retain their own culture and reject the dominant culture. So called Balkanisation.