Eastern Europeans in the United Kingdom

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Eastern Europeans in the United Kingdom
Total population
Polish nationals - 900,000
Romanian nationals - 450,000
Lithuanian Nationals - 189,000
Bulgarian nationals - 121,000
Hungarian nationals - 109,000
Albanian nationals - 100,200
Latvian nationals - 100,000
Slovak nationals - 80,000
Czech nationals - 70,000
Russian nationals - 36,000
Ukrainian nationals - 25,000
Moldovan nationals - 18,000
Belarusian - 4,734 (UN estimate 2015)
(ONS estimates 2019, except as noted)
Regions with significant populations
London, Manchester, Birmingham, Southampton, Boston
Languages
British English
Belarusian  · Romanian  · Russian  · Ukrainian
Other Eastern European Languages
Religion
Christianity, Non-religious, others
Related ethnic groups
Estonians, Latvians, Lithuanians, Belarusians, Ukrainians, Moldovans, Russians, Poles, Czechs, Slovaks, Hungarians, Slovenes, Croats, Bosniaks, Serbs, Kosovars, Montenegrins, Macedonians, Romanians, Bulgarians, Albanians

Immigrants from Eastern Europe and their descendants have been present in the United Kingdom, in small numbers, for several centuries, with subsequent large migrations in the 21st century. At times, British media also included people with Central European ancestry in this category. This is similar to the definition of Eastern European in the United States, Canada, and Australia: Coming from former Eastern Bloc countries.[ citation needed ]

Contents

There are roughly 2.2 million Eastern European nationals living in the UK, with the largest groups being Polish, Romanian, and Lithuanian. This includes 1,429,000 nationals from EU8 countries, 570,000 nationals from EU2 countries, 29,000 from Cyprus, Malta, and Croatia outside of the EU's original fourteen (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Republic of Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain and Sweden), and 216,000 from non-EU Europe.

Demographics

According to the 2011 UK census, Boston, Lincolnshire was the town with the highest percentage of Eastern-European residents in England and Wales. [1]

Education

A 2014 King's College London report found that pupils from this group faced stereotypes associated with their heritage. There were also revealed to be grade differences between different nationalities. [2] A 2019 UCL Institute of Education report found an achievement gap in areas such as Reading and Writing (in English) between Eastern European students and those of a white British background. [3] This, however, could be explained by the fact that English is their second language, as well as the fact that Slavic languages differ from English to a greater degree than Western European languages. Publication also shows much less pronounced differences in Math and suggests that the lower attainment could be due to factors such as: economic and social disadvantages, lack of fluency in English and prejudice (and racism) of the teachers. Other research shows Polish pupils perform well in British schools despite language difficulties, moreover their presence in schools appears to improve the performance of other British pupils. [4]

Employment

A 2013 academic report found data suggesting "Eastern Europeans in Scotland value the opportunities for self-employment." [5] In 2015, the majority of the grouping, that were resident in Suffolk, were working-age and often young adults. [6] In 2017, published data showed that many held low-skilled or untrained occupations. [7]

History

The 1901 United Kingdom census recorded 86,240 Eastern Europeans in England and Wales, and a further 10,373 in Scotland. This represented an increase of over 55,000 on the previous 1891 census. [8]

Post-war refugees and labour

In the aftermath of World War II, approximately 80,000 Eastern Europeans, who were displaced or homeless, settled in the United Kingdom. [9] CEE (Central and Eastern European) refugees were also recruited as labourers from the European Voluntary Workers scheme, and were brought into the country by Clement Attlee's government to rebuild post-war Britain. [10]

EU accession

Since the opening up of EU accession in the early 21st-century, many Eastern Europeans have migrated to parts of the United Kingdom. This two-decade migration phenomenon has been described as unprecedented in the history of the country. [11] In 2007 Rural Sociology published research which used Eastern Europeans in Britain as one of several examples of exceptional developments in the large-scale use of foreign labour or foreign workers in high-income nation's agricultural markets. [12]

This has created some social challenges in Britain. Russell Deacon has highlighted tension in Welsh-speaking areas of Wales, and how Cymuned, a Welsh pressure group, lobbied the Welsh government to prioritize housing for locals over East Europeans in the early 2000s. [13] In 2014, an analysis by John Harris appeared to outline social problems that had been created by large-scale immigration from Eastern Europe (and surrounding areas). Issues included reports of mafias operating, intra-ethnic disputes, killings, but also reported developments, including the ongoing revival of town centres due to East Europeans economic activity. [14]

Brexit

In June 2016, a referendum on the country's membership of the European Union took place. With a result to leave, many Eastern Europeans' relationship with, or perceived status in, the United Kingdom changed permanently. The month after the EU referendum, Under-Secretary of State Karen Bradley spoke in the House of Commons to address the issue of Eastern Europeans receiving xenophobic abuse in the aftermath of the result. [15] In 2018, British media reported growing concern for East European people affected by Brexit. [16] A 2018 study suggested the political process had particularly affected young Eastern Europeans "positioned in between the category of “migrant” and “citizen”. [17] Increasing living standards back home have been suggested in media as an explanatory driving force for the return of Eastern Europeans to their birth nations in 2019. [18]

Cultural influence

In fiction

From a Ukrainian family, British author Marina Lewycka's 2005 and 2007 novels A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian and Two Caravans focus on Eastern Europeans agricultural workers in England. [19] [20]

Social and political issues

Discrimination

Representative of the polarising nature regarding the issue of immigration from the region, in 2010, Prime Minister Gordon Brown's election campaign was reported to be negatively affected when he called a member of his party a "bigoted woman", after the Labour supporter raised the topic of Eastern Europeans arriving in Britain. [21] In 2013, Romanian diplomat Ion Jinga suggested that "inflammatory rhetoric" in politics was increasing the risk of physical attacks on Eastern Europeans resident in the country. [22]

Integration

A 2013 Environment and Planning report correlated a "positive and strongly significant relationship between self-employment and integration" for the group. [5] In 2014, University College London's Dr Julia Halej published study which analyzed perceptions created by national media; how Eastern Europeans within the country occupied the social boundary of "whiteness" in Britain, being variously portrayed as "‘valuable’, ‘vulnerable’ and ‘villainous’". [23] A 2014 King's College London report, which examined the insights and challenges into the rapidly increasing various Eastern European ethnic groups in the UK education system, found that "Young people from Eastern Europe are seen as a new ‘Other’, both by the white majority and more established minority ethnic groups." [2]

A 2018 research by Dr Magdalena Nowicka, published in the Journal of Intercultural Studies, detailed data-studies which revealed how some people within the group aspired for, or achieved, increased social status by embracing the meritocratic values of the white British class. [7]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Demography of the United Kingdom</span>

The population of the United Kingdom was estimated at over 67.0 million in 2020. It is the 21st most populated country in the world and has a population density of 270 people per square kilometre, with England having significantly greater density than Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland. Almost a third of the population lives in south east England, which is predominantly urban and suburban, with about 9 million in the capital city, London, whose population density is just over 5,200 per square kilometre.

Anglicisation or anglicization is a form of cultural assimilation whereby something non-English becomes assimilated into, influenced by or dominated by Englishness or Britishness. It can be socio-cultural, where a non-English person, people or place adopt(s) the English language or English customs; institutional, where institutions are modified to resemble or replaced with the institutions of England or the United Kingdom; or linguistic, where a foreign term or name is altered to become easier to say in English. It can also refer to the influence of English culture and business on other countries outside England or the United Kingdom, including media, cuisine, popular culture, technology, business practices, laws, or political systems.

Since 1945, immigration to the United Kingdom, controlled by British immigration law and to an extent by British nationality law, has been significant, in particular from the Republic of Ireland and from the former British Empire, especially India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, the Caribbean, South Africa, Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, and Hong Kong. Since the accession of the UK to the European Communities in the 1970s and the creation of the EU in the early 1990s, immigrants relocated from member states of the European Union, exercising one of the European Union's Four Freedoms. In 2021, since Brexit came into effect, previous EU citizenship's right to newly move to and reside in the UK on a permanent basis does not apply anymore. A smaller number have come as asylum seekers seeking protection as refugees under the United Nations 1951 Refugee Convention.

The foreign-born population of the United Kingdom includes immigrants from a wide range of countries who are resident in the United Kingdom. In the period January to December 2016, there were groups from 22 foreign countries that were estimated to consist of at least 100,000 individuals residing in the UK.

The United Kingdom is an ethnically diverse society. The largest ethnic group in the United Kingdom is White British, followed by Asian British. Ethnicity in the United Kingdom is formally recorded at the national level through a census. The 2011 United Kingdom census recorded a reduced share of White British people in the United Kingdom from the previous 2001 United Kingdom census. Factors that are contributing to the growth of minority populations are varied in nature, including differing birth rates and Immigration.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Migration Watch UK</span> British think-tank and campaign group

Migration Watch UK is a British think-tank and campaign group which argues for lower immigration into the United Kingdom. Founded in 2001, the group believes that international migration places undue demand on limited resources and that the current level of immigration is not sustainable.

African immigrants in Europe are individuals residing in Europe who were born in Africa. This includes both individuals born in North Africa and Sub-Saharan Africa.

Somalis in the United Kingdom include British citizens and residents born in or with ancestors from Somalia. The United Kingdom (UK) is home to the largest Somali community in Europe, with an estimated 108,000 Somali-born immigrants residing in the UK in 2018 according to the Office for National Statistics. The majority of these live in England, with the largest number found in London. Smaller Somali communities exist in Birmingham, Bristol, Manchester, Liverpool, Leicester, Milton Keynes, Sheffield and Cardiff.

Portuguese in the United Kingdom are citizens or residents of the UK who are connected to the country of Portugal by birth, descent or citizenship.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Other White</span> Ethnicity classification used in the 2011 United Kingdom Census

The term Other White is a classification of ethnicity in the United Kingdom and has been used in documents such as the 2011 UK Census to describe people who self-identify as white persons who are not of the English, Welsh, Scottish, Romani or Irish ethnic groupings.

British migration to Spain has resulted in Spain being home to one of the largest British-born populations outside the United Kingdom in the world, and the largest in Europe. Migration from the UK to Spain has increased rapidly since the late 1990s and the registered population of British nationals in Spain in 2014 was 297,229 (2014). After Brexit, in 2020 British nationals in Spain numbered 262,885.

United Kingdom immigration law is the law that relates to who may enter, work in and remain in the United Kingdom. There are many reasons as to why people may migrate; the three main reasons being seeking asylum, because their home countries have become dangerous, people migrating for economic reasons and people migrating to be reunited with family members.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum</span> A plebescite

On 23 June 2016, a referendum, commonly referred to as the EU referendum or the Brexit referendum, took place in the United Kingdom (UK) and Gibraltar to ask the electorate whether the country should remain a member of, or leave, the European Union (EU). It was organised and facilitated through the European Union Referendum Act 2015 and the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000. The referendum resulted in 51.9% of the votes cast being in favour of leaving the EU. Although the referendum was legally non-binding, the government of the time promised to implement the result.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Migrations from Poland since EU accession</span>

Since the fall of communism in 1989, the nature of migration to and from Poland has been in flux. After Poland's accession to the European Union and accession to the Schengen Area in particular, a significant number of Poles, estimated at over two million, have emigrated, primarily to the United Kingdom, Germany, France and Ireland. The majority of them, according to the Central Statistical Office of Poland, left in search of better work opportunities abroad while retaining permanent resident status in Poland itself.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Results of the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum</span>

The 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum took place in the United Kingdom and Gibraltar on 23 June 2016. Membership of the European Union had been a topic of political debate in the United Kingdom since the country joined the European Communities in 1973. This referendum was conducted very differently from the European Communities membership referendum in 1975; a more localised and regionalised counting procedure was used, and the ballot was overseen by the Electoral Commission, a public body which did not exist at the time of the first vote. This article lists, by voting area for Great Britain and Gibraltar and by parliamentary constituency for Northern Ireland, all the results of the referendum, each ordered into national and regional sections.

Issues in the United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, 2016 are the economic, human and political issues that were discussed during the campaign about the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union, during the period leading up to the Brexit referendum of 23 June 2016. [Issues that have arisen since then are outside the scope of this article].

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The result in favour of Brexit of the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum is one of the most significant political events for Britain during the 21st century. The debate provoked major consideration to an array of topics, argued up-to, and beyond, the referendum on 23 June 2016. The referendum was originally conceived by David Cameron as a means to defeat the anti-EU faction within his own party by having it fail, but he misjudged the level of public support for leaving, particularly amongst Labour Party voters. Factors included sovereignty, immigration, the economy and anti-establishment politics, amongst various other influences. The result of the referendum was that 51.8% of the votes were in favour of leaving the European Union. The formal withdrawal from the EU took place at 23:00 on 31 January 2020, almost three years after Theresa May triggered Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty on 29 March 2017. This page provides an overarching analysis of the different arguments which were presented by both the Leave and Remain campaigns.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">White people in the United Kingdom</span> Racial and multi-ethnic group

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References

  1. Jamie Merrill (5 April 2015). "General Election 2015: In Boston, Ukip hope to overturn a 12,000-vote Tory majority with its immigration policies". The Independent . The Lincolnshire town of Boston, according to the last census, has the highest proportion of Eastern Europeans in England and Wales, and Ukip has been gaining ground here since 2012.
  2. 1 2 Antonina Tereshchenko (2014), New migration new challenges: Eastern European migrant pupils in English schools (PDF), King's College London, Young people, irrespective of their specific national backgrounds, report a set of detrimental cultural stereotypes applied to Eastern Europeans in England, e.g. as being heavy drinkers and smokers, jobless, aggressive and so on.
  3. Feyisa Demie (2019), Educational attainment of Eastern European pupils in primary schools in England: Implications for policy and practice (PDF), UCL Institute of Education, There is also a wide variation in performance between regions in England, with large attainment gaps between Eastern European and White British children.
  4. Bingham, John (22 May 2012). "Polish children boosting standards among English pupils, study suggests". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  5. 1 2 Sergei Shubin; Heather Dickey (2013). "Integration and mobility of Eastern European migrants in Scotland". Environment and Planning (Volume 45 ed.). SAGE Publications. pp. 2959–2979. Firstly, frequent and multiple migrations of Eastern Europeans to Britain have led to the creation of networks of recruitment agencies, and training and support organizations, and have changed work organization and employment relations in the host communities.
  6. "Health and Wellbeing Suffolk: Joint Strategic Needs Assessment - Migrants from Eastern Europe" (PDF). Suffolk County Council. 1 July 2015. The majority of Eastern European people in Suffolk are young adults of working age. There are also children and some middle-aged and older people.
  7. 1 2 Magdalena Nowicka (2018). "Cultural Precarity: Migrants' Positionalities in the Light of Current Anti-immigrant Populism in Europe". Journal of Intercultural Studies. Taylor & Francis. pp. 527–542. Still, the majority of Eastern Europeans in Britain perform low-paid, unqualified jobs (Frattini 2017) ... Various studies among Eastern Europeans in Britain have demonstrated how they claim higher social status by embracing the meritocratic values of the white British class, and by emphasising their whiteness (Datta and Brickell 2009; Fox et al. 2015).
  8. Anne J Kershen (2008). "Immigrants, Sojourners and Refugees". In Chris Wrigley (ed.). A Companion to Early Twentieth-Century Britain. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 142. ISBN   978-0631217909. The 1901 Census recorded the presence of 86,240 eastern Europeans in England and Wales and 10,373 in Scotland ... This represented an increase of more than 55,000 on the previous Census.
  9. Paulius Mackela (2018), Eastern Europeans in Britain: Successfully Integrated Citizens or Alienated Migrants?, British Journal of Politics and International Relations, Britain has a long-standing history of migration from Eastern Europe ... The 1940s was a period of even greater migration to Britain due to the cataclysmic events of the Second World War. Amongst millions of migrants who came to Britain, approximately 80,000 people were from Eastern Europe (McDowell, 2003, p. 865) ... The latest statistical data shows that there are more than 1,7 million migrants from Eastern Europe currently living in the UK (Migration Observatory, 2015, p. 3).
  10. Zinovijus Ciupijus (2011), Mobile central eastern Europeans in Britain: successful European Union citizens and disadvantaged labour migrants? (Volume 25 ed.), Work, Employment & Society, pp. 540–550, The cataclysmic events of World War II and its aftermath brought Polish political and military exiles in the 1940s and, simultaneously but independently, labour migrants from the European Voluntary Worker scheme. The latter scheme was created by the Attlee government to recruit tens of thousands of CEE refugees from the displacement camps in Germany to fill the post-war labour shortages in Britain (Kay and Miles, 1992).
  11. Zinovijus Ciupijus (2012), "EU Citizens or Eastern European labour migrants? The peculiar case of Central Eastern Europeans in Britain", Politeja (Volume 20 ed.), Jagiellonian University, pp. 29–46, Contemporary Central Eastern European migration to the UK has been described as one of the most unprecedented phenomena in recent British history.
  12. Kerry L. Preibisch (2007), "Local Produce, Foreign Labor: Labor Mobility Programs and Global Trade Competitiveness in Canada", Rural Sociology (Volume 72 ed.), John Wiley & Sons, pp. 418–449, In high income countries, a striking development has been the increasing employment of foreign workers in agricultural labor markets, with notable examples including North Africans in Spain, Eastern Europeans in the United Kingdom, and Latin Americans in the United States.
  13. Russell Deacon; Alan Sandry (2007). Devolution in the United Kingdom: England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Edinburgh University Press. p. 179. ISBN   978-0748624164. The problem of solely English-speaking or Eastern European people moving into predominantly Welsh-speaking areas has at times been a sensitive political issue. In 2001 a pressure group, Cymuned (Community), began to lobby the Welsh Assembly on issues relating to inward migration and the need to prioritise local housing for local people.
  14. John Harris (16 June 2014). "Fear and anger in once-wealthy town divided by insecurity and immigration". The Guardian .
  15. "EU Referendum: Race Hate Crime". Hansard. 5 July 2016. Much of the reporting of hate incidents has been through social media, including reports of xenophobic abuse of eastern Europeans in the United Kingdom, as well as attacks against members of the Muslim community.
  16. Lisa O'Carroll (5 June 2018). "Concerns for eastern Europeans in Brexit 'settled status' plan". The Guardian .
  17. Kate Botterill; David McCollum; Naomi Tyrrell (2018), Negotiating Brexit: Migrant spatialities and identities in a changing Europe (Special Issue Paper ed.), Wiley, Young Eastern Europeans in the United Kingdom positioned in between the category of "migrant" and "citizen" as the Brexit process unfolds.
  18. Shaun Walker (October 26, 2019). "'This is the golden age': eastern Europe's extraordinary 30-year revival". The Guardian . In the long run, if the countries of central and eastern Europe can continue to catch up with the west, many of the emigres will be drawn back. With Brexit stalking the UK, there are already anecdotal signs of an incipient return..
  19. Susan Wyndham (January 6, 2007). "This year's best books". The Sydney Morning Herald . A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian was a hit debut for Marina Lewycka, who returns with Two Caravans , about Eastern Europeans in England (Fig Tree, February)
  20. Peter Kingston (15 July 2008). "The truth and the tractors". The Guardian . Like Tractors, her second published novel, Two Caravans, is about eastern Europeans in England. In this case they have come to pick strawberries.)
  21. Polly Curtis (28 April 2010). "Gordon Brown calls Labour supporter a 'bigoted woman'". The Guardian . At one point, Duffy mentioned the presence of eastern Europeans in Britain but did not develop her argument ... Duffy interjected: "You can't say anything about the immigrants because you're saying that you're … but all these eastern European what are coming in, where are they flocking from?"
  22. Ion Jinga (21 February 2013). "Romanians' presence in the United Kingdom and the value of free movement of people". The Daily Telegraph . The risk of racist attacks on eastern Europeans in Britain is rising because of "inflammatory rhetoric" from politicians, Romania's ambassador to London warns today.
  23. Julia Halej (2014), Other Whites, White Others: East European Migrants and the Boundaries of Whiteness, University College London, p. 245, The media analysis identified a panoply of cultural stereotypes about East European migrants prevalent in Britain, synthesised into a taxonomy of 'valuable', 'vulnerable' and 'villainous' Eastern Europeans, revealing the complexity of the positions that East European migrants occupied within the symbolic boundary of 'whiteness' in the elite discourse in Britain.