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A young person outside a jobcentre
‘The implicit distinction between British young people and immigrant communities must be combatted if we are truly to address issues of dispossession facing many young people in Britain today,’ write Gurminder K Bhambra and John Holmwood. Photograph: Danny Lawson/PA
‘The implicit distinction between British young people and immigrant communities must be combatted if we are truly to address issues of dispossession facing many young people in Britain today,’ write Gurminder K Bhambra and John Holmwood. Photograph: Danny Lawson/PA

There is a false divide between young and minorities

This article is more than 8 years old

Your article (Children have negative views of immigration, survey shows, 20 May) is troubling in its own right, but what is more disturbing is the division made between “young people” on the one hand and “minorities/migrants” on the other. The article reports that young people have been hit particularly hard in the downturn and that it’s easy for their economic concerns to be manifested as hostility towards immigrant communities. This misses the point that the young people who have been the hardest hit by the downturn are black and minority ethnic young people (Report, 11 March). Your March article suggests there was a 50% rise in long-term unemployment for young ethnic minority people in the UK, compared with a 2% decline in unemployment for young white people. Indeed, the implicit distinction between British young people and immigrant communities is precisely what needs to be combatted if we are truly to address issues of dispossession and crisis facing many young people in Britain today.
Gurminder K Bhambra Professor of sociology, University of Warwick
John Holmwood Professor of sociology, University of Nottingham

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