Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1062002 Political Geography 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper explores the contradictory politics of race, religion and multiculturalism in contemporary Britain. It is argued that a pan-European political consensus has emerged concerning the ‘end of multiculturalism’ where a liberal ethos is being supplanted by an authoritarian stance focused on securitization, risk and terror. Based on a qualitative investigation of thirty Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) and faith-based voluntary organisations in the Tyne and Wear conurbation of North East England, the paper divulges their grounded opinions on race, religion and multiculturalism. Groups disclose a high level of civic responsibility and commitment to community participation with an emphasis on integration rather than segregation. Discussions of race, religion and multiculturalism reveal many BME organisations are removed from the politics of decision-making and transfixed by the structures of whiteness that bind them, and to which they must respond. The paper concludes by considering the workings of whiteness in an attempt to displace the burden of cohesion that has come to settle upon BME and faith-based organisations in political debates on race, religion and multiculturalism in the present.

► Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) views on multicultural cohesion are explored. ► 30 interviews with BME and faith organisations in North East England were conducted. ► Participants were active citizens and integrationists not separatists. ► Structures of whiteness effect how BME organisations are perceived and self-present. ► The burden of state multicultural cohesion cannot rest solely with BME communities.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities History
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