Immigration has long been associated with the urban landscape, from accounts of inner-city racial tension and discrimination during the 1960s and 1970s and studies of minority communities of the 1980s and 1990s, to the increased focus on cities amongst contemporary scholars of migration and diaspora. Though cities have long provided the geographical frameworks within which a significant share of post-war migration has taken place, Sarah Hackett argues that that there has long existed a rural dimension to Muslim integration in Britain.
This book offers the first comprehensive study of Muslim migrant integration in rural Britain across the post-1960s period, examining the previously unexplored relationship between Muslim integration and rurality by using the county of Wiltshire in the South West of England as a case study. Drawing upon a range of archival material and oral histories, it challenges the long-held assumption that local authorities in more rural areas have been inactive, and even disinterested, in devising and implementing migration, integration and diversity policies, and sheds light on smaller and more dispersed Muslim communities that have traditionally been written out of Britain’s immigration history.
Tabella dei contenuti
Introduction: Muslim integration in Britain – a theoretical and analytical framework
1 Wiltshire: diverse Muslims, unexplored communities
2 Local government policy: the early years, 1960s to 1976
3 Local government policy: race relations, multiculturalism and integration, 1976 to the late 1990s
4 Local government policy: anti-racism, equal opportunities, community cohesion and religious identity in a rural space, 1999 onwards
5 Muslim migrant histories, personal narratives and experiences of integration
6 Migration, integration and Muslims in rural Britain
Conclusion: Muslim integration, the rural dimension and research implications
Bibliography
Index
Circa l’autore
Sarah Hackett is Senior Lecturer in Modern European History at Bath Spa University