Non-whites ‘not welcome in racist, colonial countryside’
‘White British cultural values have been embedded into the design and management of green spaces’ ‘The UK’S role in the European colonial project has driven the current climate and nature crises’
THE British countryside is a “racist colonial” white space, wildlife charities have claimed.
Charity umbrella group Wildlife and Countryside Link, whose members include the RSPCA, WWF and National Trust, made the claim in evidence provided to Parliament on racism and its influence on the natural world.
MPS in an all-party parliamentary group (APPG) were informed that the British countryside has been influenced by “racist colonial legacies” which have created an environment some fear is “dominated by white people”.
Green spaces are governed by “white British cultural values”, the report argues, and the perception that the countryside is a “white space” prevents non-whites from enjoying the outdoors.
The Wildlife and Countryside Link report was submitted to MPS on the APPG for race and community, which had called for evidence on the links between “systemic racism” and climate change.
The call for evidence comes in the wake of academic “hate studies” experts launching a 2023 investigation into “rural racism” in the countryside.
One section of the new Link report seen by The Telegraph argues that there are “structural, experiential, and cultural” barriers preventing ethnic minorities accessing the countryside.
It states that: “Cultural barriers reflect that in the UK, it is White British cultural values that have been embedded into the design and management of green spaces, and into society’s expectations of how people should be engaging with them.”
It adds that “racist colonial legacies continue to frame nature in the UK as a ‘white space’”, and claims that “the perception that green spaces are dominated by white people can prevent people from ethnic minority backgrounds from using green spaces”.
The report suggests that there should be a “rights-based approach” accessing green spaces, suggesting that the Government create a “legally binding target for access to nature”, possibly by ensuring everyone has a green space within a 15-minute walk from their home.
It also makes broader claims about Britain and climate change, stating: “The UK’S role in the European colonial project has also driven the current climate and nature crises.”
Link is headed by Richard Benwell, a former Lib Dem prospective parliamentary candidate, who worked as a policy adviser to the secretary of state for environment, food and rural affairs in 2018.
Mr Benwell said: “Nature should be for everyone to enjoy and to benefit from. Sadly however, the evidence shows that people of colour in the UK are more likely to live in areas with less green space and that are more heavily polluted, and at the same time are significantly less likely to visit natural spaces.
“There are multiple complex reasons behind this, as well as contemporary well- documented experiences of racism that people are still encountering. Access for all and addressing the barriers people are facing should be one of the guiding lights for all nature sites.”