exit, voice or accommodation? diversity and the white working class in england and wales eric...

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Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College [email protected] ; [email protected]

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Page 1: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Exit, Voice or Accommodation?

Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales

Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris,Birkbeck College

[email protected]; [email protected]

Page 2: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Community and Closure

• 'The distinctiveness of cultures and groups depends upon closure and, without it, cannot be conceived as a stable feature of human life. If this distinctiveness is a value, as most people…seem to believe, then closure must be permitted somewhere.' – Michael Walzer, Spheres of Justice (1983)

Page 3: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Exit, Voice, Accommodation• Voice = White opposition to

immigration and/or Far Right voting (Closure 1)

• Exit = ‘White Flight’ or Avoidance (Closure 2)

• Accommodation = White acceptance of diversity, immigration,

• ethnic change (No closure/transformed closure)

• ESRC project: How are exit, voice, acc. related?

Page 4: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Conceptual Frameworks

•Dominant Ethnicity

•Political Demography

•Ethnic Status

Page 5: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

White + Working Class. Why?• Ethnic identity more important source of identity for

dominant ethnic group members of lower economic status (i.e. Ulster Protestant working class; Oriental Jews; poor ‘redneck’ whites or Afrikaners) – Yiftachel 1999; Roediger 1991

• Less mobile identify with more ascribed rather than achieved characteristics. Ontological security bound up with locality, ancestry. – Durkheim 1893; Parsons 1951; Giddens 1991; Skey 2011

• Research generally finds greater opposition to ethnic change and ethnic equality among working-class whites

Page 6: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Data and Methods

• Methods: Quantitative and Qualitative• Quantitative First, then qual, then back to

quant• Today mainly on quantitative findings to date• Sources: ESRC datasets, i.e. BHPS,

Understanding Society, ONS LS, also Citizenship Survey

Page 7: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

ONS Longitudinal Study• The permission of the Office for National Statistics to use the

Longitudinal Study is gratefully acknowledged, as is the help provided by staff of the Centre for Longitudinal Study Information & User Support (CeLSIUS). CeLSIUS is supported by the ESRC Census of Population Programme (Award Ref: RES-348-25-0004). The authors alone are responsible for the interpretation of the data.

Census output is Crown copyright and is reproduced with the permission of the Controller of HMSO and the Queen's Printer for Scotland.

Page 8: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Exit

Page 9: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

‘White Flight’ in England?•A number of leading geographers (Catney and Simpson 2010; Finney and Simpson 2007; Simon 2009) suggest that both whites and minorities leave dense, poor areas for leafier more attractive places

•But even they do not deny that ethnic preference plays some role

•One question we seek to answer is how much of a role ethnicity plays BOTH in decisions about whether to leave, AND where to move to. ‘Avoidance’ and ‘Flight’

Page 10: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Counterurbanisation?

Source: Finney 2011 Source: Catney and Simpson 2010

Page 11: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Counterurbanisation Method

Wards% White

Quintile 1 7554 98Quintile 2 726 87Quintile 3 288 73Quintile 4 180 57Quintile 5 102 34Total 8850 91

Simpson (2007) argues that both whites and nonwhites are leaving poor urban areas at similar rates. ‘Counterurbanisation’ thesis. Yet even here, there is evidence of some ethnic difference.

Page 12: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Moved Out in 2000-2001:

Wards % White Wh British Minorities WH Other White Irish

Quintile 1 7554 98 1.1% 4.7% 3.2% 1.5%

Quintile 2 726 87 5.4% 6.4% 7.7% 4.1%

Quintile 3 288 73 6.8% 6.0% 8.1% 5.6%

Quintile 4 180 57 7.0% 4.6% 7.8% 3.8%

Quintile 5 102 34 6.1% 2.9% 13.1% 3.2%

Total 8850 91

Source: Office for National Statistics. 2001. ONS Longitudinal Study.

Page 13: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Counterurb. theory explains Why but not Where

• Most people move because younger, married, wealthier, better educated

• Move to leafier, better areas• White British are only somewhat more likely

than minorities to leave an area that is under 50% white (t= 3.38)

• But White British move to much whiter areas than minorities (‘white avoidance’ rather than white flight)

Page 14: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Predictors of Quintile Shift, 1991-2001 (excluding area controls for ethnicity, density, poverty)

40-4950-59

over 7060-6930-39

Age: 10-19Separated

DegreeA level2 child

WidowedO level

Not ApplicableArmed Forces

DivorcedRemarried

Other Skilled manual

GCSEChildren: 1 child

MarriedClass: Managerial and Technical

3+ childSkilled nonmanual

Mixed ethnicity householdSocial Housing

Partly unskilledUnskilled

White working classWhite British ethnicity

-100 -80 -60 -40 -20 0 20 40Coefficient

Source: Office for National Statistics. 2001. ONS Longitudinal Study.

Page 15: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Trends in Ethnic Residential Mobility, England, 1991-2001

• Whites and minorities leaving poor urban minority areas for economic reasons, but:– Minorities, especially if poor, prefer to remain in

diverse areas– Whites, especially working class, married,

homeowners, prefer to avoid diverse areas• Minority spread matches white ‘flight’ and

avoidance, leaving segregation little changed

Page 16: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Voice: Opposition to immigration

• Citizenship survey 2006 to 2011• Do you think the number of immigrants

coming to Britain nowadays should be…• Majority view, consistently over 80% since

2005 amongst white UK-born population• Regional distribution fairly evenly spread

amongst regions of low/high diversity bar Greater London

Page 17: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Percentage of white respondents who favour a reduction by a lot and little (combined) and a lot in

migration by class

Upper class Middle class Working class Students Never worked/unemployed0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

ReduceReduce a lot

Source: Aggregated Citizenship Surveys 2007/2008/2009/2010/2011N= 32340

Page 18: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Demographic: opposition to immigration

• Working class respondents no more likely to be opposed to immigration than middle class, although class is significant when restricted to extreme responses

• Being older, with low educational achievement and longer residence, make opposition to immigration more likely

Page 19: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Attitudes: Opposition to immigration

• Perceptions of preferential treatment and council discrimination, 3.3 times and 1.6 more likely

• But not likely to be unemployed/council tenants or in low income groups

• English identity more powerful predictor than British (which runs other way when restricted to more extreme responses)

• Low levels of general trust more important than interpersonal trust.

Page 20: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Far right support

• Similar drivers to opposition to immigration but strongly segmented appeal to male, middle-aged, skilled manual workers

• Motivated by overwhelming concern with immigration and sense of discrimination but more likely to be homeowners than council tenants, working rather than unemployed, and in higher income brackets

• Begs the question, if anti-immigrant sentiment is the main driver of far right support, and this is widely felt within the white UK-born population, why is the far right not stronger?

Page 21: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Far right support

• Answer may lie on the supply side; spoilt identity and social norms

• The far right may appeal amongst social groups in which those social norms hold less weight, or holding views contrary to them reinforce an oppositional identity (to the political mainstream)

• UKIP, the “BNP in blazers”

Page 22: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Bringing White Flight and Immigration Views Together

• Puzzle: Why are whites (and even white working-class British) people living in diverse wards more tolerant of immigration?

• Diversity- reduces the odds by 20% between 8th and 9th decile of diversity of ward

Page 23: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Reduce the number of immigrants (a lot and a little) by social class and ward diversity (aggregated dataset) for all white respondents

Most Ho-mogeneous

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Most Diverse

50

55

60

65

70

75

80

85

90

95

UpperMiddle Working classAll

Page 24: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Threat or Contact?

• Whites – even the white working class – living in diverse wards are more tolerant of immigration

• US literature shows that diversity at ward/tract level (10-30k) is associated with less white hostility to immigrants, minorities, immigration

• BUT at metro and LA level (100k-1m), more diversity is associated with more white hostility

• Feeling of threat at metro level as minorities grow, but positive contact at local level creates accommodation?

Page 25: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Other Explanations..

• Contact or Threat is the usual framework• But other explanations:

1) Selection bias: whites who don’t like diversity leave

2) not diversity of context, but something about the white population in diverse areas that creates a different context. Perhaps an area that is transient, young, rent-based, well educated…(future work)

Page 26: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Not Selection: Those who ‘exit’ do not ‘voice’

• BHPS and Understanding Society• Whites moving to diverse areas and those

leaving them are identical when it comes to voting, family values, English national identity, British patriotism, newspaper readership

• No measure of immigration opinion, but research in Sweden identical conclusion

Page 27: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Mobility?: Stayers Differ From Movers

• Swedish research shows that whites leaving diverse areas are somewhat less likely to be hostile to immigrants than whites who remain

• Our work with BHPS might corroborate this: movers are more tolerant on family values and morality, whilst stayers tend to be more nationalistic and defensive of Britain’s standing in the world. But differences not large

• From the Citizenship survey, the longer a respondent’s residence, the more likely they are to be opposed to immigration

Page 28: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Stayers and far right support

• From my work on support for the far right in Greater London, electoral support for the BNP stronger in areas of lower residential mobility (less in- and outflows)

• Support for the BNP the resort of those who lack the resources to exit? (More working class)

• Far right support linked with white enclaves nested within more ethnically diverse areas- bifurcated relationship with diversity (Goodwin 2011, Bowyer 2008)

• Positive relationship at Local Authority (conflict) against negative at ward level (contact)

Page 29: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Future Research

• Focus Group Work required to tease out meanings that white working class people hold

• 4 focus groups, 2 in white minority areas, 2 in adjacent mainly white areas. 2 in London, 2 in North or Midlands

• 2011 data updates (ONS LS, Census)

Page 30: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Two caveats

• Far support not linked to ethnic diversity per se but composition and rate of demographic change drivers of far right support

• Higher levels of far right support found in areas with a higher proportion of Pakistani and Bangladeshi residents

• Stronger far right support found in areas that have experienced rapid demographic change from a relatively low base; 33% decline in white UK-born population in Barking & Dagenham

Page 31: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Counterargument to Contact Theory I

• May be that those who are mobile (i.e. leaving or entering a diverse area) are more individualistic

• Makes them more tolerant, but also lower neighbourhood social capital?

• Transience=diversity; transience=tolerant whites, ergo diversity=tolerant whites? (ie contact with minorities not the reason for tolerance)

• Future work: controlling for transience, diversity of ward no longer significant predictor of tolerance?

• Walzer argument would be disconfirmed by this analysis

Page 32: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Counterargument to Contact Theory II

• White ethnic preference could be subconscious and latent (Charles 2002; Clark 2006)

• Ideological toleration may mask ethnic drives beneath (Blinder)

• Here Walzer’s argument substantiated

Page 33: Exit, Voice or Accommodation? Diversity and the White Working Class in England and Wales Eric Kaufmann and Gareth Harris, Birkbeck College e.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uke.kaufmann@bbk.ac.uk;

Conclusion• Local ethnic geography and demography matter for national issue

perceptions and vice-versa• Little white flight, but lots of white avoidance• Anti-immigration and far right vote (closure 1) not apparently linked to

White flight/avoidance (closure 2) but both linked to local ethnic diversity and change, and stronger among white working class

• White British accommodation may be associated with contact, or to white mobility. Requires more research

• Decline of single-group ethnic segregation but rise in white segregation from minorities

• White attitudes to immigration may be softened by contact; or may be hardened by white consolidation and by jumps in minority presence in formerly lily-white areas