The Search for Liberal Anglo-America: From Racial Supremacy to Multicultural Politics (original) (raw)

Anti-racist cultural politics in post-imperial Britain: the New Beacon Circle

2007

Britain’s non-white population has formed and worked with complex, sometimes contradictory, and often potent forms of cultural capital in shaping and re-shaping their space in the British nation. Academic as well as policy recognition of the complexity of Britain’s racialised minorities has manifested itself in the widespread belief among the liberal elite, that Britain is becoming a ‘multicultural society’. That multiculture is most often conceived as a judicious, or heinous (depending on your p0litcal outlook) mix of ethnic identities and communities. This perspective, whether from the liberal left or the xenophobic right, obscures more than it reveals (Alleyne 2002). In particular it obscures the political and intellectual work that underlies the negotiated and ever-contested emergent partially multicultural reality of Britain today. That reality has come about in part through political and cultural work, negotiation and contestation.

The State of Multiculturalism and the Muscularity of Liberalism: Notes on Ideology in Britain and Europe

Our current glut of crises, one following hot on the heels of last, presents us with both opportunities and problems of interpretation. How and where are we to begin unpicking the mesh of social, economic and political issues confronting? To what extent are the critical paradigms to which we were used prior to 2008, the beginning of the global financial crisis, still applicable or useful? Specifically as Europeans, how does the project of integration and federalisation implicate and alter these other factors? This essay is a contribution towards a critical response to this glut, specifically towards the issues of immigration and multiculturalism which confront Europe. Our chosen route in is a speech given by British premier David Cameron to the Munich Security Conference in February 2011. Though it may seem like an arbitrary decision, I believe that this speech provides us with a way of structuring our thoughts on the subject, and a way of coming understand Europe's resurgent hard-Right. We begin with a brief sketch of the political context, tracing Cameron's move from his earlier social liberalism to the present hard-line populism, driven by both the ascendency of UKIP and the need to deflect blame away from those responsible for the financial crisis. We then move to a close analysis of the speech, before seeing how the ideological formulation it constructs can be used to understand the European hard-Right.

British national identity and the dilemmas of multiculturalism

Nationalism and ethnic …, 2008

Nationalism and multiculturalism are often perceived as polar opposites with the former viewed as the disease and the latter the cure. Contrary to this view, this article argues that a strong national identity, albeit of a particular kind, is prerequisite to a stable and functioning multicultural society. The article seeks to identify both the causes and the implications of the absence of an overarching, civic national identity in Britain, further to the goal of seeking a meaningful solution. It is our contention that the problem lies in the difficulty involved in reconciling current pressures on British identity with a coherent narrative of British history, especially its imperial past.

THE GHOST IN THE MACHINE: AN OVERVIEW AND ANALYSIS OF BRITISH MULTICULTURALISM KAROLINA CZERSKA-SHAW

As multiculturalism in the United Kingdom passes to a 'post' phase of existence, at least in academic and political discourse, it is important to consider the lingering impact of over fifty years of its presence in the form of Race Relations and integration measures. This article aims at a critical reassessment of the overarching strategies that have developed over the last half-century in relation to the integration of immigrants by putting the legacy of British multiculturalism into a firm historical and socio-political context; by marrying immigration and integration policies with normative models of integration in the hope of drawing a certain causality between them; and finally by highlighting the changes that have taken shape amidst the continuity of certain shared principles or frames of reference. The first part of the article looks at immigration and integration policies in Britain through a historical perspective; the second section delves into the concept of integration itself and its complex manifestations in British politics and policies; finally, a critical review of the development of these policies and their 21 st century manifestations and outcomes are discussed in the third section. The analysis shows that the United Kingdom has, over the last decade, seen an ever-stronger intertwining of immigration and integration policies towards a robust civic integration approach, made evident in the introduction of citizenship and language testing schemes and strict preconditions on entry. Meanwhile, the turn in anti-discrimination legislation has been rather subtler. It has extended its reach to other areas of inequality, focusing on more pressing, or less contentious minority group support, such as women and LGBT rights, whilst retaining a measure of ethnic and national minority protection.

The Ghost in the Machine: An Overview and Analysis of British Multiculturalism

2017

As multiculturalism in the United Kingdom passes to a ‘post’ phase of existence, at least in academic and political discourse, it is important to consider the lingering impact of over fifty years of its presence in the form of Race Relations and integration measures. This article aims at a critical reassessment of the overarching strategies that have developed over the last half-century in relation to the integration of immigrants by putting the legacy of British multiculturalism into a firm historical and socio-political context; by marrying immigration and integration policies with normative models of integration in the hope of drawing a certain causality between them; and finally by highlighting the changes that have taken shape amidst the continuity of certain shared principles or frames of reference.