Come what may, we're here to stay

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1948 British Nationality Act
1971 Immigration Act
1981 England riots
2001 Bradford riots
2024 anti-immigration protests
2024 summer riots
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Akhtar Ali Baig
Ambalavaner Sivanandan
Anti-Nazi League
anti-racism
anti-racist activism
Asian Youth Movement
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Awaz
Ayatollah Khomeini
Balvinder Virk
Bengali Housing Action Group
Black Panthers
Black Solidarity Day
Bradford 12
Brick Lane
Britain First
British Asian history
British Bangladeshis
British Indians
British National Party
British Pakistanis
British Union of Fascists
Campaign Against Racial Discrimination
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Commonwealth Immigrants Act
Dadabhai Naoroji
Darcus Howe
diaspora
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firebomb attacks
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Grunwick processing plant
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Homeland Party
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Imperial Typewriters strike
Indian Seamen's Union
ISU
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Lee Anderson
Malcolm X
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Mansfield Hosiery Mills strike
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Mukhtar Dar
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National Front
Nationality Act of 1948
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Newham Youth Movement
Organisation of Women of Asian and African Descent
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summer 2025 race riots
Tahir Akram
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trade unions
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workers' rights
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781526177582
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Manchester University Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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As British South Asians reel from the riots of summer 2024, this book tells the inspirational story of how the community organised against racism in the past and how it continues to fight in the present.

British South Asians have a long tradition of radical political activism. The 1970s and 1980s saw the community grappling with prejudice in the workplace and violence in the streets. But this history is deeper than you might think, from students agitating for independence at the heart of the British Empire to seafarers organising global strikes on the eve of the Second World War.

In Come what may, we’re here to stay, Taj Ali reveals how successive generations fought for rights, dignity and a sense of belonging while actively shaping the country they now call home. He shows that British South Asian political life has often been defined less by religious difference than by shared commitments to anti-imperialism and anti-racism. In pursuit of these goals, alliances have been forged with other movements, from Irish republicanism to Black Power.

As racism rears its ugly head again, Come what may, we’re here to stay asks: are we are doomed to repeat the past or will we learn from our mistakes and build a better world together?

Taj Ali is a journalist and historian. He is the former editor of Tribune and regularly appears as a commentator on the BBC, as well as contributing to the Guardian, Al Jazeera English and others. In 2025 he set up Anti-Racist Radar, an organisation that monitors and reports on racist attacks in the UK. For his work on hate crime and Islamophobia he was chosen as a finalist for the 2026 Orwell Prize.

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