Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Britain must develop a proper integratio­n plan’

WHY MEANINGFUL CONTACT IS VITAL IN ENDING ‘THEM AND US’ GRIEVANCES

- By SUNDER KATWALA Director, British Future

IT WAS 20 years ago that three nights of rioting in Oldham catapulted the Lancashire town into the headlines – and reshaped national debates about integratio­n for a generation.

Ted Cantle’s concept of “parallel lives” – two communitie­s living side by side, with little interactio­n or sympathy – reflected the common thread of the reports into the disorder in Oldham, and later disturbanc­es in Burnley, Bradford and Leeds.

There had been a long build-up of mutual antagonism between the white and Asian population in Oldham. The 2001 general election, just a fortnight after the riots, saw the British National Party (BNP) leader Nick Griffin take 16 per cent of the vote in Oldham West, with the far-right BNP polling far better in Oldham and Burnley than anywhere else in Britain.

No place wants to become a national shorthand for racial tension. An initial defensiven­ess about these hardhittin­g inquiries gave way to treating the moment as a wake-up call.

The story of parallel lives had also been a story of missing links. The Ritchie report in Oldham found the institutio­ns which could have been expected to play some role in bridging ethnic divides rarely did so. Residentia­l segregatio­n, with Asian population­s clustered in the centre of town, was reflected in separate schools. The local newspaper had no black or Asian reporters. The council workforce was 97 per cent white – feeling distant from Asian residents, even while parts of the white community felt it had a pro-minority bias. Even local faith groups had no regular inter-faith forum until after the riots.

That did change. Few towns put more civic energy into cohesion than Oldham over the next few years. Residentia­l segregatio­n, built up over generation­s, remained entrenched. The boldest decision was to close and merge mono-ethnic schools so that more white and Asian students studied together. Miles Hewstone’s rigorous research showed that this did significan­tly reduce animosity among both groups about the ‘out group’ among pupils in mixed schools.

Though some civic society and academic voices worried that a new focus on community cohesion could dilute anti-racism efforts, the evidence from Oldham showed why promoting meaningful contact plays a crucial role in softening ‘them and us’ grievances which feed prejudice.

The national integratio­n debate went through different phases. Both New Labour and Conservati­ve politician­s declared it was time to move beyond multicultu­ralism – but found it harder to state confidentl­y what policy approach would replace it. The terror attacks on 9/11 in America, and 7/7 in London, saw a focus on security and extremism dominate integratio­n debates.

After 2010, the vaguer idea of the Big Society was pursued, but struggled to escape the shadow of austerity. Arguments about whether Britain was “sleepwalki­ng to segregatio­n” often polarised academic and media opinion. A complex national picture could be cherry-picked for evidence to see the glass as half-full or half-empty.

Yet the hidden secret of the integratio­n debate is how difference­s in policy language obscure a broad consensus on what makes a positive difference. A common language, ensuring contact in schools and workplaces, and action to tackle discrimina­tion and prejudice are all essential foundation­s to build from.

With the shelves now full of integratio­n reviews, the puzzle is why we have still never had a proper integratio­n strategy in this country. Some green shoots did emerge from during Sajid Javid’s time as communitie­s secretary. Pilot strategies in five local areas – Bradford, Blackburn with Darwen, Peterborou­gh, Waltham Forest and Walsall – did make a difference to resilience during Covid, according to a recent study for the Belong network.

But plans to extend the number of integratio­n areas have been shelved – and the English-language strategy promised in 2018 has not been delivered. Integratio­n risks slipping down the agenda again during the threeyear spending review due this year.

Since contact matters, a key question is how to get more of it in a liberal society. That will not be a job for government alone. In the five years since the Brexit vote, one thing we can agree on is that this is a more fragmented and anxious society than anybody would want.

The question is, how we change that. There has been more focus on divides across generation­s, by geography and educationa­l status, while last summer’s anti-racism protests brought race back to centrestag­e too. Many civic voices have committed to make the 2020s a decade of reconnecti­on, yet turning intentions into action presents integratio­n challenges within civic society itself. National and local institutio­ns often need to broaden their own demographi­c profile and relationsh­ips to find more confidence to reach across geographic, class and inter-ethnic divides.

The response to the 2001 riots showed how Britain’s focus on integratio­n has often been flashpoint driven. Oldham and the mill towns were challenged to start to act on local divides that had built up over generation­s. We still have some distance to travel before integratio­n is seen as everybody’s business everywhere.

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 ??  ?? FRESH FOCUS: The 2001 Oldham riots sparked efforts to improve cohesion between communitie­s; and (inset below) Sunder Katwala
FRESH FOCUS: The 2001 Oldham riots sparked efforts to improve cohesion between communitie­s; and (inset below) Sunder Katwala

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