citizenship paper 2 immigration and identity

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the impact of this on identity debates

  • london and parliment are centrilised 
  • identity within the nations and regions of the uk, for example scotland have a diffrent education and legal system
  • Northern Nreland  
  • exsistence is 1921
  • divided becuse of culture
  • unionlists who support northen ireland adn the union within the UK
  • nationalists support ireland
  • identity is based upon culture and follows 2 strands within society:
  • differing sports 
  • supports irish language and does not support it 
  • Wales
  • identity factors are the culture
  • and the importance of rugby and Eisteddfod
  • England
  • regions and counties have tradidtions and cultral identities 
  • counties life yorkshire and lancashire promote their own identities 
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the impact of this on identity debates cont.

  • as more people are migrating to the UK the identity factors may not be so important
  • the impact on the debate has led to growth od devolution:
  • scotland have their own parliment
  • northern ireland and wales have their own asseblies 
  • this means that people can decide the impact on their lives in their own nation
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migration and the EU

  • since 1973 the UK has been a member of the EU
  • and over time many people from europe have moved to the UK for work and live.
  • nearly 1.2 million citizens live and work in the EU
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the impact on different communities in the UK

  • the imapct of changing population has varied
  • in the 19th century there was a large scale movement in the UK from the countryside to the city's this grew the towns into cities
  • Manchester grew by 600% between 1771 and 1831
  • in the 20th century many towns and cities have seen changing patterns of movement
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argument fro and against immigration

for:

  • cheap labour 
  • hepls overcome labour shortages
  • immigrants prepared to do unskilled jobs 
  • some highly skilled
  • cultural diversity 

against

  • language problems
  • rasical tesions 
  • jobs lost to community workers. 
  • by employing high skilles migrant labour the goverment avoids costs in developing UK skills base
  • pressure on housing and local services 
  • limitededucation in immigration population
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mutual respect and in a diverse society

  • David Cameron made a speech claiming multicultrlism had failed.
  • he said the UK need a clear sense of shared national identity
  • he outlined the values assosiated with this: 
  • freedom of speech 
  • freedom of worship 
  • democracy 
  • the rule of law 
  • equal rights 

it is important to remeber that the values have limits

  • freedom of speech no total freedom as there is a legal limit 
  • freedom of worship - there is freedom to worship and to not to worship 
  • democracy - citizens can decide thereselvles who they want for the next goverment 
  • the rule of law - all citizens are equal before the law and have equal access 
  • equal rights - all citizens have there rights protected 
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mutual respect and in a diverse society cont.

David cameron needed to change things but to he had to make some practical things happen:

  • immigrants should speak english 
  • britishness classes and british history shouldbe taught 
  • the national citiznehsip service was introduces for 16 year olds 
  • developing the nature of the concept of the big society 

the concept of multiculturalism has underpinned the nature of the UK since 1945.

  • multicultrulism refers to the idea of differing peoples and groupsliving alongside each other in harmony and having respect for their cultral and relgious diffrences.
  • options for the future:
  • ethnic groups integrated into wider society.they begin to infulence and then it envolves 
  • the ethnic groups integrate into society and have there own culture as well as taking on a nother and then they have a multiple identity 
  • ethic groups only have there own culture and refuse a diffrent one
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identity and multiple identities

key word

nature V nurture - a debate about weather a person's personality and identity are most affected by their biological backgroud or by the way i which they were brought up 

  • people gain identity in diffrent ways
  • some people study their biological backgroup which others sutdy how they were brougth up. 
  • the debate envolves around the 2 aspects

group identity

  • relates to groups in border sense that one is associated.
  • it can be a peer group is formal or informal and supporting a team a nd belonging to an organisation 

multiple identity 

  • relates toa person at a diffrent time and in diffrent situations may adopt a identity
  • example: Manchester united supporter comes from pakistani and supports Pakistani agains england cricket 
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national identity

keyword 

citizenship - a legal action coffered by a state upon members of the sate indication their membership of the state

important things if someone wants to be british:

  • to have british citizenship
  • to have been born in Britain 
  • to have lived here for most of your life 
  • to repect political insitutions and laws
  • to be able to speak english
  • to be a christian 
  • to feel british 
  • to have british ancestry 
  • to share customs/traditions

the UK is more complex as it has four identies and mroe values 

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Comments

steve

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spelling mistake

Crystal Parsons

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Yes, many...!

brodie cook

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sorry very bad english

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