Commission for Racial Equality

Regular price €56.99
anti-discrimination law
Asian Applicants
Britain's Ethnic Minorities
britains
Britain’s Ethnic Minorities
British Nationality Act
Category=JHB
civil liberties analysis
Community Relations Commission
CRE Report
Education Authority
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnic Group Representations
Ethnic Majority Population
Ethnic Minority Housing
Genuine Occupational Qualifications
Good Race Relations
Harmonious Society
Key Word
Lea
legal powers impact on minorities
lobby
Minority Group Progress
multicultural education
Non-discrimination Notice
Oldham Council
Pep Report
Powerful Statutory Body
Public Library Service
public sector governance
race
Race Relations Act
Race Relations Lobby
race relations policy
relations
Social Affairs Unit
social integration theory
Transracial Adoption
West Indian Pupils

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138508279
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Jan 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In the United Kingdom, as in the United States, race relations are surrounded with taboos defined by the politically correct concepts of what Ray Honeyford calls the race relations lobby. This lobby, championed by the Commission for Racial Equality (CRE) has a vested interest in depicting the United Kingdom as a society rotten with endemic racism, and its ethnic minorities as victims doomed to failure. An outgrowth of the Race Relations Act of 1976, the Commission was founded in response to worthy concerns about race and patterned after its American prototype, the Congress of Racial Equality. Its constant demands for increased powers have only increased with the coming into power of the New Labour Party. That makes Ray Honeyford's critique all the more urgent. Honeyford exposes the policies and practices of the Commission to public view, encouraging informed debate about its need to exist. The CRE possesses considerable legal powers powers which seriously undermine the great freedoms of association, contract, and speech as-sociated with the United Kingdom. Without denying the presence of racial prejudice, Honeyford shows that the picture of the United Kingdom as a divisive nation is a serious misrepresentation.

Placing the CRE in its historical and political context, Honeyford outlines its powers, and analyzes its formal investigations in the fields of education, employment, and housing. He also examines its publicity machine and its effect on public and educational libraries. He points out the danger of uncritically replicating the American experience. According to Honeyford, Americans have replaced a melting-pot notion of society, with all citizens loyal to a national ideal, with a "tossed-salad" concept which encourages the creation of self-conscious, separate, and aggressive ethnic groups, each claiming special access to the public purse, and having little regard for national cohesion and individual liberties.