Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Mass immigration in the period 1945-c.70 a Essay

Was Britains near to circumstances in-migration in the period 1945-c.70 a success or a failure?The question of whether Britains go about to mass immigration in the period 1945 c.1970 was a success or a failure is not as straightforward as it first whitenthorn seem. Unpacking the question a little will help. Firstly, it is important to consider what is meant by Britain? Should it be taken to mean the politics or the people, and which people?Britains draw close might be thought more likely to refer to governance but clearly many British people having nothing to do with government also encountered mass migration and migrants in one way or another and therefore can be said to have had an approach to it. Also, the idea of a singular approach over whatsoever 25 years is misleading. A variety of governments were incumbent over this period and therefore a variety of approaches to mass immigration might be expected. British society also experienced significant changes from the trauma of World War 2, the immediate post-war period and decolonisation to the seventies and thus approaches and reactions amongst the population at large are bound to be many and varied as well.Then, finally, there is the question of success and failure. In objective history how are success and failure to be judged? There is no very satisfactory answer to such subjective notions. It might best be determined on a policy basis, either governmental or non-governmental, but that is still a rather narrow view. This essay will evidence selectively both governmental and non-governmental approaches to mass immigration into Britain from 1945-1971 in a broadly chronological framework, beginning with the immediate post-war period and Polish settlement, before twist to what has been termed colonial or New Commonwealth immigration.Government policy will be analysed as will some of the social effects of and reaction these to migrations. Finally, the governmental approach to mass immigration from Ir eland will be examined and contrasted with the former examples before a conclusion and answer is attempted. It should be noted at the outset that it is not possible in the space provide to include discussion of every immigrant population group, nor to examine satisfactorily the responses of the population at large but the groups discussed herein have been chosen on the basis of numbers racket.That the reconstruction of the Britain after World War 2 would require fatigue was already a concern of the government in 1944, who appointed a purplish Commission to assess the matter of population. This Commission reported in 1949 that immigration could be welcomed without re action if the migrants were of good gentle stock and were not prevented by their religion or race from intermarrying with the host population and becoming merged into it. An indication of who constituted acceptable migrants had already been presumptuousness by the government. At the end of World War 2 there were perh aps 500,000 Poles in Britain. While initially the government favoured voluntary repatriation for the Poles, the advent and intelligence of a USSR dominated communist Poland was off-putting or impossible to many.Recognising the potential offered by the Poles, the Polish Resettlement Corps (PRC) was formed in 1946 to help in their transition to civilian life in Britain. This was followed in 1947 by the Polish Resettlement Act. The dependents of those who enrolled in the PRC were also admitted to Britain and by 1948 there were approximately 114,000 enrolled in the PRC and 33,000 dependents. Layton-Henry has concluded that, while sympathy for the Poles existed because of the war and the Soviet annexation of their country, the main reason for the successful integration of the Polish ex-servicemen and their families was the acute shortage of labour at the end of the war although there was some opposition from people and trade unions.Post-war Britain was still imperial and colonial (thoug h undergoing an ongoing process of decolonisation), if no semi persistent a power, and as British subjects colonial immigrants had the amend of access to Britain and full rights of citizenship, including voting rights, the right to work in the civil service and the right to serve in the armed forces. Notable in discussions about colonial immigration are the westmost Indies and the Indian subcontinent and it is immigration from these areas that shall be considered below.In both the West Indies and the Subcontinent there was an awareness of the labour market in Britain during the war colonial labour had been widely utilise, with some settlement resulting. In India, Britain had gained a reputation as a land of milk and honey and mutual knowledge was undoubtedly increase by the war. The increasing migration of West Indians to Britain began in 1948, the Empire Windrush leaving capital of Jamaica on the 8th of June with 492 passengers bound for a new life with their right, and that o f other citizens of colonies or Commonwealth countries, to free ingress guaranteed by the British Nationality Act 1948. The inquire for labour in Britain and the poverty of some the West Indies were the main factors leading to the migration, but also important was the especially Jamaican tradition of labour migration.many had traditionally gone to the nearby and rich US, but this was severely restricted in 1952, directing migrants to the UK. Although much West Indian migration to Britain was done in the consent of better prospects, direct recruitment also took place, for example between the capital of the United Kingdom Transport Executive and the Barbadian Immigrants Liaison Service and the NHS. Similarly, mass migration of Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims from India and Pakistan was to increase in the 1950s and 1960s. Many factors governed this, such as the economic opportunities presented by Britain, pressure for land and unemployment following limited industrialisation. In both case s, travel agents, family reunions and chain migration helped to twit numbers, with the arrival of dependents often signalling a shift from temporary to permanent migration.West Indies India Pakistan Others Total1953 2,000 2,0001954 11,000 11,0001955 27,500 5,800 1,850 7,500 42,6501956 29,800 5,600 2,050 9,350 46,8001957 23,000 6,600 5,200 7,600 42,4001958 15,000 6,200 4,700 3,950 29,8501959 16,400 2,950 850 1,400 21,6001960 49,650 5,900 2,500 -350 57,7001961 66,300 23,750 25,100 21,250 136,4001962* 31,800 19,050 25,080 18,970 94,900Table 1. Estimated net immigration from the New Commonwealth(* first cardinal months)It has been said that after the war, the British Labour government maintained an informal door policy to immigration, delib eontely settling some groups and encouraging others, although the racialism of the Royal Commission Report which followed naturally from the racism strong among the government, armed forces and civil service before and during the war remained pres ent. Of particular concern were the immigrants visibility and ability to gull into British society, obviously favouring white Christians. In early 1950 an interdepartmental working committee recommended discouraging colonial immigration at source, tightening up entry requirements and encouraging voluntary repatriation.The immigration of coloured people was now being seen as a problem in several areas of British life although because of the elflike numbers involved, the Labour government chose not to act and curtail the traditional rights of citizens. The new standpat(prenominal) government of 1951 were also concerned with avoiding the creation of, in Churchills words, a magpie society. Both Labour and Conservative governments from 1948-62 were involved in the complex policy-making and ideological racialisation of immigration policy and had by 1952 instituted some covert, and sometimes illegal, administrative saloons to discourage black immigration. Debate continued throughout t he 1950s about non-white immigration and social problems that were, in the minds of some, intimately affiliated with it.Where blacks had settled in Britain before the war, racial harm was already a factor but during the war, when co-operation and unity were vital, it may have lessened for a time. For non-white immigrants the post-war era revealed continuing hostility and vilification from various parts of society, including in Stepney a priest who considered that blacks posed a social and moral problem. Incidents of violence occurred in the late(a) 1940s between whites, sometimes Irish immigrants, and non-whites in Birmingham, Liverpool and London. These continued sporadically, leading to the much publicised Notting Hill and Nottingham riots in 1958 and the again in 1968.There were problems on both sides including discrimination against non-whites in employment and housing while some whites also worried about these issues and it seems that certain employers and landlords, seeking to maximise their profits took payoff of the situation. Despite such extreme incidents we must contrast also the less high profile friendly and welcoming approach of some people. It would indeed be inappropriate and inaccurate to generalise about the approach to mass immigration by the public and individual local circumstances must always be considered. However, it has been said that post-war British society was still very traditional, and despite the empire, very insular for the majority of British people. This, combined with the pride of empire and the recent kill of Germany, exacerbated by the natural British superiority taught in schools, could easily lead to a negative attitude to immigrants.In 1962 the Commonwealth Immigration Act was passed by a Conservative government, legally restricting for the first time immigration from the Commonwealth. It was attacked by some sections of Labour and the media press as a response to perfect(a) racist pressures. Other Labour members, however, supported and had campaigned for stricter immigration controls, sometimes even stricter than that of 1962 and eventually Labour u-turned on the issue of repealing the Act. In fact, the looming prospect of strict rule of immigration from the New Commonwealth speeded up immigration, in particular from the West Indies, destroying the rough balance that had existed between labour demand and supply.The overt politicisation of race and immigration is visible in the Smethwick campaign of 1964. Peter Griffiths fought the Conservative campaign against Labours Patrick Gordon Walker and was returned against the national trend. His campaign was based, as he saw it, on defending the interests of the local white majority over the influx of immigrants and he notoriously refused to condemn the popular slogan If you want a nigger for a neighbour vote Labour defending it as an expression of the popular feeling about immigration. Somewhat ironically, Labour introduced another Commonwealth Ac t in 1968 in order to restrict the entry of East African Asians who held British passports.The governmental approach to post-war mass immigration from the colonies and the Commonwealth should ultimately be viewed in the light of Irish immigration, for to 1971 the Irish were the largest immigrant minority in Britain (see Table 2). In the 1861 census 3% of the population of England and Wales were Irish and 7% in Scotland with their numbers increased to 957,830, just under 2% of the total population of Great Britain, in the 1971 census. In the late 1920s and 1930s some restrictions on immigration and repatriation were proposed, partially in anxiety at the potential effects of US immigration restrictions increasing the flow of Irish into the UK, but were never realised except during the war.The worries uttered by the reconvened working troupe in 1955 were restricted to controlling the immigration of coloured colonial and Commonwealth citizens, who were British subjects with legal right s to settle, and not with Irish immigration, concluding that the Irish are not whether they like it or not a different race from the ordinary inhabitants of Great Britain. That an estimated 60,000 Irish per year were migrating to Great Britain compared with removed fewer colonial or Commonwealth citizens was evidently not the point, nor was the fact that Irish immigration also led to social tensions as the working party had itself concluded. These were later emphasised by the Commonwealth Acts, about which there was no pretence of adopting non-racist immigration controls by including Irish or other aliens in the code.Table 2. Origins and numbers of some overseas born population of Great Britain in 1971(note that immigrants may have also emigrated, therefore this table does not utter total numbers of immigrants per year of entry)In such a climate, the rise of the Conservatives Enoch Powell as a spokesman for anti-immigrant resentment seems inevitable and the public response to his rivers of blood prediction saw his popularity in polls rise from 67 to 82% in his favour, even making him a contender for the Conservative leadership. Powell used rhetoric and anecdote to create an image of Britain in its death throes through massive immigration, racial civil war and strife in which true white Britons were strangers in their own country, ousted from school, home and hospital by immigrant communities who plotted against them using the invidious Race Relations Act of 1968. The whole premise of the problem of immigrant numbers is in fact a non-starter since in the post-war era emigration from Britain has in any case generally been at a higher rate than immigration.Fortunately, racism at the highest levels was less acceptable than in former days and Powells speech was found offensive by many of his parliamentary colleagues although 327 out of 412 Conservative constituency groups wanted all immigration stopped indefinitely and 55 wanted strict limits imposed. A Conse rvative victory owing in some measure to Powells dissonant if not entirely unpopular personal campaign and a promise that there would be no further large-scale permanent migration led to the Immigration Act of 1971, replacing employment vouchers with annually renewable work permits that no longer carried the right of permanent residence or the right of entry for dependants. Because of the special relationship between Britain and Ireland, none of this applied to Irish immigrants, suggesting that colour prejudice was at its heart.In conclusion, despite initial so-called open door policy to immigration, guaranteed by colonial or Commonwealth citizen rights guaranteed in 1948, the approach of successive British governments from 1945 to 1971 was to attempt to regulate mass immigration on the basis of skin colour. Indeed it seems that in the late 1960s even Labour accommodated itself to a White Britain Policy and the difference in approach to Irish and West Indian and Indian immigrants cl early bears this out. Even today it is apparently acceptable to make a special case for the Irish who, according to Migration observe UK hardly come into the uniform category since they were part of Great Britain for centuries despite the fact that this ignores Irish ethnicity and identity while favouring skin colour, language and historical political and economic domination as reasons for some spurious sameness.An Irish anecdote illustrates the offensiveness of this, stating just because we speak English doesnt mean we are the same. Racial and immigration issues became inextricably linked and highly politicised and the prominence of Enoch Powell lead to the rise and normalisation of far right groups such as the National precedent and the BNP, still active today and recently on trial for race crimes. Nowadays the debate centres around asylum seekers and illegal immigrants, who, in the style of Powells immigrants, threaten, despite the facts, to swamp Britain, and even in the run- up to the current election the Conservative leader Michael Howard is making immigration a central election issue. Was the approach a success? In terms of keeping non-white colonial and New Commonwealth citizens out of Britain, no. In terms of linking and politicising immigration and racism and normalising prejudice in British society, yes.BibliographyBrown, R. 1995. Racism and immigration in Britain, International Socialism Journal 68.Davies, N. 1999. The Isles. London Macmillan.Foot, P. 1965. Immigration and Race in British Politics. Harmondsworth Penguin.Hiro, D. 1991. Black British White British. London Grafton.Homes, C. 1988. John Bulls Island Immigration and British Society, 1871-1971. London Macmillan.Layton-Henry, Z. 1992. The Politics of Immigration. Oxford Blackwell.Office of National Statistics. 2004. Populations Trends 116 (Summer 2004).Solomos, J. 1993. Race and Racism in Britain. (2nd edition) London Macmillan

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