Think Tanks
|
|
Policy Exchange - Boston is the least integrated place in the country
The launch of the Integration Index compares 160 places across England & Wales, with Amersham coming out as the most integrated town in England & Wales
Boston in Lincolnshire is the least integrated place in the country, according to new findings released by the think tank Policy Exchange.
To mark the launch of its new unit on Demography, Immigration and Integration the think tank analysed the most recent Census data (2011), producing a list of the best and worst places in the country from the point of view of integration.
The publication of the inaugural Integration Index compares 160 places across England and Wales - with a minimum population of 20,000 and a minimum non-White British minority population of 15 per cent. The data examines ‘identity integration’ – how English or Welsh minorities living in that area feel – and ‘structural integration’ – how well minorities living in that area mix with other ethnic groups (working together, living in the same neighbourhoods).
The most integrated places are:
1. Amersham, Buckinghamshire
2. Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands
3. Loughton, Essex
4. Potters Bar, Hertfordshire
5. Letchworth Garden City, Hertfordshire
The worst integrated places are:
1. Boston, Lincolnshire
2. Wisbech, Cambridgeshire
3. Oldham
4. Spalding, Lincolnshire
5. Bradford, Yorkshire
- The most integrated places—Amersham, Esher, Rickmansworth, Sutton Coldfield—tend to be prosperous suburbs or small towns around London and Birmingham with the largest minorities being successful Indians or Europeans.
- The least integrated places, by contrast—Oldham, Accrington, Bradford, Boston, Wisbech, Spalding—are either the post-industrial districts of Yorkshire and Lancashire dominated by people of Pakistani heritage or the towns of Eastern England that have experienced large inflows of East Europeans.
- The most integrated places tend not to have one single large minority group while the worst places invariably have a single group accounting for around two-thirds of the minority population.
- Places with high proportions of Muslims tend to have high levels of residential segregation but a strong sense of belonging. They also tend to be among the most deprived.
- Places like Wisbech, Spalding, and Boston tend to have proportionally high levels of East Europeans who are working but are working separately from the White British majority.
- The more integrated the place, the greater the share of ethnic minorities in higher paid, managerial jobs.
Full table showing the most and least integrates places in England & Wales.
|
Overall rank |
Name |
Identity rank |
Structure rank |
|
1 |
Amersham |
43 |
1 |
|
2 |
Sutton Coldfield |
1 |
8 |
|
3 |
Loughton |
30 |
3 |
|
4 |
Potters Bar |
25 |
4 |
|
5 |
Letchworth Garden City |
19 |
6 |
|
6 |
Stretford |
5 |
12 |
|
7 |
Bushey |
29 |
5 |
|
8 |
West Bridgford |
12 |
9 |
|
9 |
Rickmansworth |
27 |
7 |
|
10 |
Esher |
82 |
2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
10 WORST |
|||
|
Name |
Identity rank |
Structure rank |
|
|
160 |
Boston |
160 |
152 |
|
159 |
Wisbech |
158 |
147 |
|
158 |
Oldham |
41 |
160 |
|
157 |
Spalding |
159 |
139 |
|
156 |
Bradford |
50 |
158 |
|
155 |
Batley |
9 |
159 |
|
154 |
Halifax |
56 |
154 |
|
153 |
Blackburn |
21 |
157 |
|
152 |
Keighley |
28 |
156 |
|
151 |
Accrington |
33 |
155 |


