Title: Radical Demography
1Radical Demography
2The need for public demography some examples
- New Orleans mayor expects only half of the citys
population to return - Which half?
- Trevor Phillips ghettos Black holes which
people fear to enter and from which no-one can
leave - Are there such areas?
- UK census questions Colour cannot and will not
be asked (1966) Ethnic group must be asked
(1986). - A focus on survey data encourages individualised
explanations and solutions, and discourages study
of the social and structural - Attempts to define Britain and Britishness, also
in US - Concern with economic and social progress of 2nd
generation children of immigrants
3Structure of this session
- Jamie US academic geography, and more
- What is radical demography?
- Ludi shifting the accepted view on race and
population change - What is radical demography?
- Participants Migration Watch
- What is radical demography?
4Academic Theory Spatial Assimilationand
Concentration in Space
- US academic framework has permeated public
discussion spatial assimilation theorys
normative concerns with concentrations of
non-whites - Immigrant progress marked by move into white
neighbourhoods (of which, in immigrant cities
there are increasingly few) - Also demographic composition issues age
structure means that these white neighbourhoods
are older - Emphasis on individuals rather than place limiting
5A case study leaving Los Angeles
- Much academic and policy attention devoted to
problem of immigrant Latinos clustering in
concentrated unequal Los Angeles - and idea
that 2nd generation will fail to assimilate if
they continue to live there - Yet 2nd generation Latinos are less likely than
their parents to leave Los Angeles, especially if
university-educated - emergence of Latino
immigrant middle class - Harold Meyerson neighborhood clustering has
allowed Latinos in LA to organise political power
(American Prospect 2003 article)
6Configurations of Immigrant Inequality in Los
Angeles
- Decreasing immigrant Latino inequality in Los
Angeles in last decade Living Wage movement - Even though immigrant/native wage gap is still
high in Los Angeles, racial wage gap
(Latino/white) is narrower than in other
(non-immigrant) cities - So, dispersal from Los Angeles may not be sign of
economic progress, and remaining may not be
linked to a failure to assimilate/integrate - but
a sign that LA itself is changing
7Instrumental Geographies
- Londons East End discussion class versus race
politics - Who are the engineers?
- British/American values? ie former strategies
of extended families and support networks
lamented in East End and US midwest - but coded
as crowding and voluntary segregation when
immigrants perform them - especially in contested
(integrated!) spaces - Place and space used in anti-immigrant (and
academic debate) to frame difference
(segregation, invasion, non-white spaces)
8The Nation in the Neighbourhood Popular Public
Concern
- Focus has not been about regions or
neighbourhoods in terms of why place matters
(jobs, housing, inequality, health, access) - - but rather in terms of what/how bodies mark that
space (ghettos, immigrant areas) - Multicultural Britain/London discussion and maps
in Guardian - where are they? How many? - But in US, as well as in Britain, neighbourhoods
themselves are changing in ways that make
dispersion a problematic concept
9Suggestions for a Radical Demography
- Focus on concentration without attention to place
problematic (Why are people in certain places
rather than others?) - Radical Demography would explore, for example,
disinvestment in East End and restrictions on
immigrant/refugee settlement rather than
promoting racialised citizenships - Does not allow that assimilation and integration,
in multicultural societies, are shifting
referents (ie what is Britain/US? What is an
immigrant neighbourhood?) - Radical Demography would question spatial
dispersion as integration, concentration as
(self)segregation, and static notions of place
10Radical Demography Continued
- Radical Demography would seek to challenge ideas
of place (whether Britain or America, London or
Los Angeles) that are - Racialised in their definitions
- Everyone is mixed, but not everyone counts as
mixed (Gilroy) - Historic rather than processural
- Theoretically rather than democratically
instrumental (or investigative)
11Shifting the accepted view on race and population
change
- Black areas are bad for all of us
- Previously Black people are bad for all of us
- An alternative, demographic view of segregation /
integration - Evidence
- What is Radical Demography?
- Burawoys Public Sociology
12Views of segregation, summer 2005
- Segregation at levels of black ghettoes in US
cities (Guardian, 1 Sept 2005) - Ghettos blighting Asian integration (Times, 1
Sept 2005) - Multiculturalism is failing to bring Britain's
races together, says Ted Cantle (Times, 21 Sept
2005) - Are we sleepwalking towards apartheid? (Sunday
Times, 18 September 2005) - Our worry is this is fertile breeding ground for
extremists. (Trevor Phillips radio interview
reported in Daily Mirror, 23 September 2005)
13Academic views
- Segregation indices
- How evenly spread is a group across areas
(schools, ) - Remarkable, stubborn segregation, not
optimistic - Michael Poulsen, Telegraph 1st Sept 2005
- Dr Poulsen said isolated enclaves were a feature
of immigration "You could argue that tighter
control on immigration was the only way to
curtail continuous growth." - He said that Europeans' assumption that
immigrants would be assimilated into the wider
culture with time had not been thought through. - The danger is the assimilation process is so slow
that for many it is just not possible." - Danny Dorling, Ludi Simpson, Ceri Peach, Tariq
Modood - Trevor has got it wrong segregation indices
mis-interpreted (sensitive to geog scale and
population composition) there are no ghettos in
Britain White flight worth investigating
14(No Transcript)
15Founding fathers of statistics and demography
- Francis Galton It would be quite practicable to
produce a highly gifted race of men by judicious
marriages during several consecutive generations
(1869) as much superior mentally and morally to
the modern European, as the modern European is to
the lowest of the Negro races (1892). - Ronald Fisher To increase the birth rate in the
professional classes and among the highly skilled
artisans would be to solve the great eugenic
problem of the present generation and to lay a
broad foundation for every kind of social
advance. (1917 206) - PK Whelpton By means of eugenic sterilization,
it is planned to lower the incidence of certain
undesirable qualities in the next generation
this plan should be watched carefully by
populationists in all parts of the world and such
tests of its effectiveness made as are possible.
(1938 183) - Also Spearman, Yule, Edgeworth, Dublin and
Thompson (see Donald MacKenzie (1999), and
Tukufu Zuberi (2001)
16Alternative view of Britains changing cities
17Race and population geography- hypotheses (1) -
- Immigration leads to clusters and population
growth - Occupational labour shortages in specific
locations - Clustering provides social and economic capital
- Chain migration and family building follows
- Age-structure leads to rapid natural growth in
settlement areas - Natural growth becomes greater than immigration
18Race and population geography- hypotheses (2) -
- Pressure on housing leads to dispersal
- To neighbouring areas with similar social
conditions - Counter-urbanisation to better housing, further
away - New clusters to maintain cultural and economic
capital a residential mosaic - Constraints to dispersal forced segregation
- Indigenous population flight, avoidance, racial
housing market, or none of these?
19Race and population geography- headline evidence
-
1991 2001
1. Electoral wards with non-White majority 57 118
Proportion of the group who live in these areas Proportion of the group who live in these areas
All non-White groups 15 23
Pakistani and Bangladeshi 22 35
2. Net migration within UK, 2000-2001 Non-White White
118 Electoral wards with a non-White majority -14,716 -9,747
All other wards 15,308 4,818
20Population dynamics
- After immigration, clusters are to be expected
- Growth of Caribbean, Indian, Pakistani and
Bangladeshi populations is more through natural
growth (reproduction) than immigration
Black natural change (excess of births over
deaths). Grey Net migration. Source
Williamson (2003)
21What is Radical Demography?
- Burawoys Public Sociology
Audience academic Audience other
Instrumental Professional sociology Policy sociology
Reflexive Critical sociology Public sociology
22Case study Migration Watch
- Distribute MW leaflet and MW Advisory Council
- Ask for professional, policy, critical and public
challenges/questions to the MW leaflet - Canvass for willingness to collaborate on a
fuller critique of MW.
23Ideas
- Idea of population change
- Timing of integration
- Language undefined/flexible
- Is overcrowding uniform? Everyone? Just
immigrants? All immigrants (EU/non-EU)? Who
crowds? How is crowding/overcrowding determined?
Is it overcrowded? - Where do they (MW people live?
- What about skilled immigrants? Emphasis on
asylum seekers? - Immigration (esp skilled) has been increasingly
encouraged as UK population has aged this is
part of increase/change. Immigration has been
recruited/encouraged. Scare story of job-taking
from earlier labour-shortage recruitment periods.
24- Give examples of good practise (Finland)
- Issues surrounding National ID card / estimation