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Title: School of Geography


1
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
21st Century Citizenship
Dr Louise Waite and Dr Nichola Wood
2
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • Introduction
  • 21st Century Citizenship impacts and challenges
  • Leeds Geographers work on 21st Century
    Citizenship
  • Integration experiences of Somali Refugee and
    Asylum Seeker Young People
  • New Accession 8 Migrant Communities in Leeds
  • Difference and Belonging British Asian
    Narratives of the City
  • Group Discussion 21st Century Citizenship in
    the Classroom

3
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • 21st Century Citizenship Impacts and Challenges
  • How do we live with difference in the UK?
  • Events like 9/11, 7/7, 2001 urban race riots,
    race hate attacks in Belfast impact on and raise
    questions about
  • The state of relations between Britains diverse
    ethnic and faith communities
  • Peoples experiences of inclusion and exclusion
  • The extent to which people feel as if they
    belong
  • How people understand and live with difference

4
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • Citizenship is often at the centre of debates on
    living with difference.
  • Who belongs in the UK?
  • insiders Vs outsiders
  • Citizens Vs non-citizens
  • What does it mean to be a British Citizen in a
    multicultural and multiethnic Britain?
  • What shared rights and values do people have in
    common as British Citizens?
  • What about rights for non-citizens living in
    Britain?

5
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • New Labours instrumental use of Citizenship
  • Citizenship as a tool for promoting integration
    and mutual respect and civility across Britains
    diverse social and ethnic communities.
  • Some examples
  • Mandatory school-based citizenship education at
    key stages 3 and 4 of the national curriculum
    (introduced 2002)
  • Citizenship tests for those wanting to become
    British Citizens (introduced 2005)
  • Citizenship ceremonies for new British citizens
    (introduced 2004)

6
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
RESEARCH CASE STUDY 1
Identities on the Move the Integration
Experiences of Somali Refugee and Asylum Young
People Prof. Gill Valentine, School of
Geography, University of Leeds with Dr. Deborah
Sporton, Department of Geography, University of
Sheffield
7
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • Introduction
  • Little is known about the experiences of young
    asylum seekers.
  • In 2006, UK received 23,000 applications for
    asylum, over a third were made by those aged 20
    or under.
  • 3,245 were unaccompanied children.
  • Background to Somali migration
  • Migration to UK has occurred since early C20th.
  • 18 years of civil war from 1991 -significant
    numbers of Somalis seek asylum in UK from late
    1980s.
  • Estimated that approx. 75,000 Somalis live in the
    UK.

8
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • Multi-Method Research
  • Survey (n3313) all children in Y7, Y9, Y11
    (Y13) in 8 schools 1 FE College in Sheffield
  • In-depth interviews 50 Somali children (aged
    11-18) parents/guardians. Sampled by arrival
    scenarios
  • established community of labour migrants
  • refugee/asylum seekers direct from Somalia via
    transit camps
  • secondary European migrants
  • Participant observation of local community spaces
  • WebCT exercise on-line discussion forum
  • Identity art workshops run by professional art
    therapists

Aim how do young asylum seekers negotiate and
position themselves within social narratives that
are not of their own making, that are
valued/judged in particular ways by society
according to particular constructions of -
asylum seekers - Muslims - What it means to be
British
9
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • What it means to be Somali
  • For some young Somalis who remember their
    homeland, it is a powerful part of their
    identity.
  • Most left when very young or were born while
    their families were on the move.
  • Their knowledge and understanding of Somalia is
    largely second hand through family (food,
    customs, cultural celebrations), and the media.
  • They have to position themselves in relation to
    narratives of what it means to be Somali that are
    not of their own making.
  • Those who return to Somali often find themselves
    out of place
  • When we used to go to Somalia a lot of people
    used to say oh you lot, people from England.
    And I just said to my Mum how do they know? And
    My Mum goes thats how they are because of your
    walk and the way you talk. Cos I used to talk
    English to my brother in Somalia and they used to
    turn round and stare at us and they knew that we
    were not from here (female, 17 NASS arrival to
    UK via Ethiopia and Italy).

10
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • Ambivalence about being British
  • General wariness about publicly claiming a
    British identity.
  • Concerns this would be read as shame at or
    rejection of their Somali heritage.
  • Being British is imagined as a white idenitity
  • Experiences of having their assertions of
    Britishness challenged by others.
  • Its like sometimes it sounds weird coming out
    of my mouth oh yeah British Im British
    holding a passport and everything but when Im
    talking to my friends like the ones what have
    lived in the UK all their lives theyre like No
    youre Somali The thing is yeah, Somalia is
    always going to be my home in my heart yeah but
    if I go to Somalia I feel like a visitor there
    and when Im here in the UK I just feel, I
    dont know, at home Britain is where I feel
    comfortable but theyre going Oh youre not
    British, youre not from Britain youre not
    British (girl, aged 17)

11
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • Belonging to a nation is not just about
    citizenship, its about the emotions that such
    memberships evoke (Yuval-Davis et al 2005).and
    the security that being in place provides.
  • Sheffield Somalis feel as if they belong in the
    UK - even though they dont identify as British
    because at a local level they have defined their
    own community in terms of shared values, networks
    and practices made the place their own.
  • Somali freedom to define their identities beyond
    narrow definitions of Britishness.
  • Contrast with report of the Commission on
    Integration and Coherence (2007) that warns that
    UK policy of promoting respect for difference may
    lead to separation and calls for a shared
    national vision of Britishness as a unifying
    force.

12
RESEARCH CASE STUDY 2
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • New Accession 8 Migrant Communities in Leeds
  • Louise Waite, School of Geography, University of
    Leeds
  • with
  • Joanne Cook, School of Management, University of
    Stirling
  • Peter Dwyer, Graduate School BLSS, Nottingham
    Trent University

13
Introduction
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • Recently completed study on new A8 migrant
    communities in Leeds
  • - The experiences and needs of new A8 migrant
    workers in Leeds
  • - The impact of new A8 migration on established
    communities
  • 89 participants were interviewed
  • 34 new A8 migrants
  • Polish men women, Slovak mixed gender, Roma
    families
  • 24 members of established communities
  • Pakistani men women, West Indian mixed gender,
    White residents mixed gender
  • 10 key informants
  • 21 service providers
  • Housing community relations, Health social
    care, Education and childrens services

14
Background
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • Estimated that in excess of 1 million central and
    Eastern European migrants have arrived in UK
    since EU enlargement in 2004
  • May 1st 2004 Sept 30th 2007 saw 715,000 Worker
    Registration Scheme applications
  • Low-skill labour sector concentration
    hotel/leisure sector, manufacturing/processing,
    construction industry in Leeds

15
  • Questions around what this growth and increased
    diversity of migration means for debates about
    integration
  • Complex area focus on what facilitates processes
    of integration and the emergence of cohesive
    communities in diverse multicultural contexts
  • The recent Commission on Integration and
    Cohesions report (20079) notes that
    problematic areas may occur in, ethnically
    diverse urban areas experiencing new migration,
    such as inner cities in the major metropolitan
    areas.
  • The same report has emphasis on mutual respect
    and civility that may act as the basis for a
    shared national vision of Britishness with the
    potential to unify the diverse communities living
    side by side in contemporary Britain

16
Generative and positive encounters
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • Civil nature of banal encounters and kind acts
    of mutuality
  • Sometimes we may have a chat with neighbours
    During Christmas time we shared the cards. (FG2
    men, Polish new migrants)
  • Where we live now the whole street is English
    people and they are very polite, we are greeting
    each other and at Christmas Ive got cards from
    my neighbours. (FG1 Slovak new migrants)
  • My neighbours have been very kind...They knew I
    could not speak English so she try to help me,
    slow speaking, hand movements so I could
    understand. (Roma family interview 3, mother)

17
Exclusive encounters? Segregated places and
selective withdrawal
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • Parallel lives?
  • We are getting mixed as they are living in the
    same place, but they are not mixing upThere is
    segregation within the street. (FG5 men,
    established Pakistani community)
  • I think they stick to their own little groups.
    Like with all new communities they stick to
    their own with people they know. (FG6 women,
    established Pakistani community)
  • When I worked for the private agency they were
    giving me the worst hours, late nights,
    Saturdays, Sundays and they were saying if you
    want to make up your hours, you have to take
    these hours. (FG3 women, Polish new migrants)

18
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
RESEARCH CASE STUDY 3

Difference and Belonging British Asian
Narratives of the City Deborah Phillips, School
of Geography, University of Leeds
19
The multicultural city ambiguities and
contradictions
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • Ethnic neighbourhoods as exotic spaces for
    excursion and entertainment
  • Other ethnic spaces feared, places of
    avoidance
  • areas that reproduce cultural otherness
  • sites of social exclusion
  • Minority ethnic segregation as a problem

20
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • But what does persistent ethnic segregation
    really mean?
  • How do British Asians perceive, imagine and make
    sense of the urban spaces in which they are
    living and through which they are being told to
    disperse?

21
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
BRADFORD 68,000 Pakistanis, 15 of total
population
LEEDS 15,000 Pakistanis, 2 of total population
22
Narratives of the city and minority ethnic
segregation
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • Perceived opportunities for, and a desire for,
    greater social and spatial mixing/integration
  • A continuing racialisation of space frames
    opportunities and mobility. This has implications
    for
  • perceived rights of access to space
  • use of space within the multicultural city
  • But readings, imaginings, experiences and
    opportunities differ between ethnic groups in
    complex ways

23
Representations of minority ethnic segregation as
a problem
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • The discourse on ethnic segregation is racially
    coded this problematises minority ethnic
    segregation, but not white segregation
  • Minority ethnic segregation tends to be
    pathologized
  • The association between residential segregation,
    the experience of social integration and feelings
    of belonging are complex

24
School of Geography FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
  • Themes covered by the research case-studies
  • Living with difference
  • Multiculturalism
  • Citizenship

Questions to consider Can you see ways in which
you might be able to incorporate some of the
ideas that weve outlined into your teaching? If
so, how? Is there anything else that we could do
to support your teaching around the themes that
weve discussed today (or any other related
themes)?
25
  • Further Resources
  • Post-Conflict Identities (Prof. Gill Valentine)
  • Further details of this project including copies
    of the research report can be found at
  • http//www.identities.group.sheffield.ac.uk/
  • A8 Migrant Communities in Leeds (Dr. Louise
    Waite)
  • Full research report available at
  • http//www.geog.leeds.ac.uk/fileadmin/downloads/sc
    hool/people/academic/l.waite/Migrants08.pdf
  • Racialisation of Space in Bradford (Dr. Debbie
    Phillips)
  • End of project report can be found online at
  • http//www.yorkshireuniversities.ac.uk/docs/Region
    alReviewpdfs/rr12_2.pdf
  • Regional Review http//www.yorkshireuniversit
    ies.ac.uk/archive.php
  • A free online journal that has articles that are
    potentially useful for your teaching. Volume 18,
    number 2 has articles by Waite and Valentine on
    the work featured in this session to be
    published online soon!

26
  • Questions to consider and some discussion
    points raised by the groups
  • Questions
  • Can you see ways in which you might be able to
    incorporate some of the ideas that weve outlined
    into your teaching? If so, how?
  • Is there anything else that we could do to
    support your teaching around the themes that
    weve discussed today (or any other related
    themes)?
  • Discussion points
  • Importance/impact of the type of school on
    teaching geography.
  • Differences between white groups as a route
    into exploring diversity in the classroom.
  • Letter writing and emails between students in UK
    and in other countries as ways of learning more
    about living with difference.
  • Different approaches to exploring integration
    in more ethnically mixed schools personalisation
    of topics sometimes reifies stereotyped
    perceptions of other ethnic groups.
  • Experiences of white working class students in
    light of A8 migration.
  • Segregation between ethnic groups and those who
    feel more British.
  • Problems of working with children who come from
    areas that are characterised by prejudice towards
    others.
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