1st Edition

Commission for Racial Equality British Bureaucracy and the Multiethnic Society

Edited By Yosef Gorni, Ray Honeyford Copyright 1998
322 Pages
by Routledge

322 Pages
by Routledge

313 Pages
by Routledge

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... Read more
1: The Commission for Racial Equality; 2: The Race Relations Act 1976: The Background; 3: The Race Relations Act 1976: Provisions and Effects; 4: The CRE—Duties and Powers; 5: The CRE in Action; 6: Political and Economic Planning (PEP) and Race Relations; 7: Education and the CRE; 8: Employment and the CRE; 9: Housing and the CRE; 10: Publicity and the CRE; 11: Libraries; 12: Freedom of Association; 13: Concluding Thoughts

Biography

Ray Honeyford