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Our City: Migrants and the Making of Modern Birmingham (Hardback)
  • Our City: Migrants and the Making of Modern Birmingham (Hardback)
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Our City: Migrants and the Making of Modern Birmingham (Hardback)

(author)
£18.99
Hardback 288 Pages
Published: 07/03/2019

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'Indispensable . . . Speaks of hope and courage' Observer

'An ode to openness, offering a refreshing alternative to those accounts that treat migrants as faceless statistics' David Lammy MP

'A highly informed and eloquent account of life in a modern British city during a period of globalisation, austerity and mass migration' Patrick Cockburn, Independent

Race and migration are the most prominent and divisive issues in British politics today.

As Brexit and the dangers of Islamist extremism are being used to reassert a closed British identity, these stories – of fifty migrants, first and second generations; men and women; from thirteen different countries from Ireland to India, Pakistan to Poland, the Caribbean to Somalia – highlight the variety of migrant experience and offer an antidote to the fear-mongering of the tabloid press.

This positive story of integration is all too rarely told, and it offers a firm defence of the principles of equality and increased diversity. Our City shows why mixed, open societies are the way forward for twenty-first-century cities, and how migrants help modern Britain not only survive but prosper.

Publisher: Unbound
ISBN: 9781783527168
Number of pages: 288
Dimensions: 240 x 159 mm


MEDIA REVIEWS
'Excellent . . . Celebrates Birmingham’s success in harnessing the drive of its migrant population' Prospect
'This is a book that speaks of the hope and courage of those who came to Birmingham in the 50s and 60s . . . In tight, energetic prose, Bloomfield shows how Birmingham’s second and third-generation migrant population embraced the move to a service economy and now look forward to the future with optimism noticeably lacking elsewhere in the country' Observer
'A highly informed and eloquent account of life in a modern British city during a period of globalisation, austerity and mass migration' Patrick Cockburn, Independent
'Engaging and accessible' The Tablet 'A vivid and valuable picture . . . Not just about Birmingham but how to make multi-cultural cities work' Tony Wright, Political Quarterly

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