In the U.K., Chander says there's a “comfortableness” in talking about race and ethnicity that isn't the case in many other European countries. She attributes this .... Chander at the European Network Against Racism estimates that less than 1 percent of people who work in the institutions are people of color. read more
Yes as people in UK are used to living with people of various races in gheir cities whereas people in rest of Europe (Excluding France) don't get to see people except of their own race. read more
Race discrimination laws in Northern Ireland offer less protection than in other parts of the UK, a report says. According to the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI), employers and public bodies are only able to take a limited range of actions to combat disadvantage. read more
From the first segregated public housing projects of President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal, to the 1949 Housing Act that encouraged white movement to the suburbs, to unconstitutional racial zoning ordinances enacted by city governments, Rothstein substantiates the argument that the current state of the American city is the direct result of unconstitutional, state-sanctioned racial discrimination. read more