ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2001: Featuring original research concerning young African-Caribbeans in Birmingham, this book addresses complex issues of urban violence and insecurity, racism and discrimination, alienation, resistance and social networks. Employing the methodology of sociological intervention developed by Alain Touraine, the book explores the experiences of a group of young people who are simultaneously presumed to be victims and perpetrators of violence. It examines their relationship to this violence, its meanings for and effects upon them, how they constitute themselves as social actors and subjects, and their capacity for action. The book also addresses the fact that ethnic monitoring and multicultural policies place the question of ethnicity on the British social and political agenda alongside issues of racism and discrimination. Exploring both the perceived and personally experienced position of young people within this context, it sheds important new light upon processes of group identification and action.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction 1

ByDanièle Joly

chapter Chapter One|16 pages

Research in Ethnic Relations in Great Britain: State of the Art Today

ByCathie Lloyd, Danièle Joly

chapter Chapter Two|17 pages

Ethnicity and Labour Migrants’ Mode of Settlement

ByDanièle Joly, Cathie Lloyd, David Owen

chapter Chapter Three|21 pages

Politics and Ethnic Minorities

ByDanièle Joly, Cathie Lloyd, David Owen

chapter Chapter Four|34 pages

Minority Ethnic Groups in Birmingham

ByDavid Owen

chapter Chapter Five|24 pages

Blacks in British Society: Categorisation and Ethnicity

ByDanièle Joly, Cathie Lloyd, David Owen

chapter Chapter Six|24 pages

Meanings and Mechanisms of Action

ByDanièle Joly, Cathie Lloyd, David Owen

chapter |2 pages

Conclusions

ByDanièle Joly, Cathie Lloyd, David Owen