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Community cohesion: Duty Challenge or Inspiration?

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Presentation on theme: "Community cohesion: Duty Challenge or Inspiration?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Community cohesion: Duty Challenge or Inspiration?

2 Workshop Programme Supported by the Dept.for Children, Schools and Families

3 Ted Cantle Associate Director, IDeA Professor, Institute of Community Cohesion (iCoCo) Sir Keith Ajegbo Associate, Institute of Community Cohesion

4 Housekeeping and administrative arrangements

5 Purpose of the Day Build upon existing experience Agree what community cohesion is all about Share ideas – what works, and what doesn’t – across and within regions Help to build good practice (please complete the form!)

6 Purpose of the Day Identify your priorities for discussion And some ideas for your action plan

7 First Session Ted Cantle

8 A changing world….. In 1965 75m people lived outside the home country, now 180m 600,000 Brits live in Spain, more in other countries (200,000 NZ); 3m with second homes 25m tourists to UK, 70m from UK to global destinations Globalisation in many forms: international students, brands, internet etc.

9 A new picture of ourselves

10 But are we comfortable with diversity….. Riots in France, Australia and other countries Demands to limit migration – growth of extreme right Divisions & tensions within communities & neighbourhoods More change to come as globalisation continues

11 How does this impact on neighbourhoods and schools? Economic benefits in many areas Rising population and demands upon services (though keeping some going) Much greater population ‘churn’ – 50% in inner cities rising to 90%! 1Q

12 It is not just about numbers ….. Broader Diversity: Over 300 languages in London schools (71 in 1); 60 in Middlesbrough Faith - dimension of diversity School composition

13 And are school compositions changing? Contested issue – what is ‘segregation’? Natural growth of younger BME is higher ‘White flight’ from cities, or just ‘mobility’ – London -340,000 W, +600,000 BME Leicester – 30,000 W +30,000 BME New inward migration (EU and elsewhere) impact of parental choice, faith schools, academies New evidence from academics (Bristol) 2Q

14 So What is Community Cohesion? Emerged after 2001….. Polarised & segregated communities Parallel lives Ignorance, fear & demonisation Lack of leadership & values Initiatives reinforced difference & separation

15 Community Cohesion is Promoting a common sense of belonging Positively valuing diversity Tackling disadvantage and inequalities Promoting interaction in the workplace, schools and neighbourhoods

16 Community Cohesion has developed Applies to faith, age, sexual orientation, travellers – any difference, not just ethnicity The Muslim community, in particular, has been a focus of Government policy and programmes The CIC suggests it should be extended to ‘rights and responsibilities’ and ‘trust in local institutions’ And new focus on rural areas – EU migration

17 The Management of Settlement Managed migration in economic terms but less attention to social & community Resources conflicts are sometimes real and data limited Concerns about distribution and timeliness of finance CIC propose new national agency for settlement Emerging ‘identity’ issues

18 A new concern about ‘identity’ From a small number of identifiable groups struggling to maintain heritage To larger number of diaspora identities which compete with national identity – faith providing new set of identities Premium on difference, limited investment in commonalities, shared experiences & values Development of ‘Britishness’ and citizenship agenda

19 But what does this mean to schools ? Teaching and learning implications Educational and other values in conflict? Neighbourhood difference reflected in school associations and behaviours? Development of ‘Britishness’ and citizenship agenda

20 Who Understands and Manages the Interface ? No longer a ‘black’ and ‘white’ issue – wider diversity Between and within BME communities Conflict prevention and resolution – police, or LA role? Views of young people themselves – emerging gang culture? the new family? Identity Q3

21 Has multi-culturalism failed? We are a multi-cultural country Response to racism / discrimination – acceptance of pluralism with some real success Multicultural model focussed on difference not commonalties Equalities & anti-discrimination not enough – need to change attitudes & values

22 The challenge of cohesion What does it mean in Liverpool, Southampton, Boston – Lincs & London boroughs Need to break down segregated communities & ‘fear of difference’ Continue to tackle unequal life chances, poverty & disaffection New focus on ‘place-making’ And create a sense of belonging

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25 Does the school have a wider role in place making? Not dismissing racism & identity ‘loss’ Rigid social & economic patterns Limited conceptions of ‘others’ Challenged by ALL differences Cross-cultural or ‘bridging social capital’ limited

26 Developing mixed communities and shared spaces Planning role – existing housing areas & new developments; the BSF opportunity (eg Oldham) Intercultural dialogue through youth services, sports and arts, interfaith work - and schools, eg twinning Developing shared spaces – leisure, shopping, libraries, sports, arts, festivals And building social capital

27 Understanding our communities Mapping community dynamics – change in number & settlement patterns Understanding perceptions & realities Anticipating disaffection & tensions Community leaders – ‘gateways’ or ‘gatekeepers’ Structural changes & funding regimes to encourage people & organisations to co-operate

28 Is social capital important to schools? Neighbourhood and social networks which enable communities to collaborate and trust each other Is it affected by population churn & diversity? How do we build & create ‘bridging’ social capital? Is it more difficult now to get people involved in their local community, as school governors, volunteers? Do schools demand enough of other agencies?

29 The partnership role Creating diversity advantage – creative and entrepreneurial cities; press and media Local community leaders – ‘gatekeepers’ or ‘gateways’ Local employers Local celebrities & role models – e.g. sports personalities Values, symbols & celebrations Q4 role in wider community

30 Key Questions Population ‘churn’ and growth Changing composition of schools Identity issues and shared values Schools community role and support from other agencies

31 Let’s Build Upon Success

32 Ted Cantle Ted.cantle@idea.gov.uk www.cohesioninstitute.org.uk


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