
Published online:
22 March 2012
Published in print:
23 July 2008
Online ISBN:
9781447301912
Print ISBN:
9781847420244
Contents
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four Shifting geographies of minority ethnic settlement: remaking communities in Oldham and Rochdale
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Introduction Introduction
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Immigration in the UK Immigration in the UK
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The geography of new immigration The geography of new immigration
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The shifting geography of new immigration: explaining ‘new’ patterns of residential settlement The shifting geography of new immigration: explaining ‘new’ patterns of residential settlement
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New immigration and neighbourhood change New immigration and neighbourhood change
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Neighbourhood change and community cohesion Neighbourhood change and community cohesion
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Acknowledgements Acknowledgements
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Notes Notes
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References References
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Chapter
nine New immigration and neighbourhood change
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Pages
177–198
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Published:July 2008
Cite
Reeve, Kesia, 'New immigration and neighbourhood change', in John Flint, and David Robinson (eds), Community cohesion in crisis? New dimensions of diversity and difference (Bristol , 2008; online edn, Policy Press Scholarship Online, 22 Mar. 2012), https://doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781847420244.003.0010, accessed 29 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
This chapter discusses the neighbourhood impacts of new immigration to the United Kingdom (UK). It aims to show that new immigrants are arriving from a broad range of countries and are also settling in neighbourhoods that have not formerly experienced significant immigrants. The discussion also demonstrates the dramatic scale and pace of change that is happening and the challenges which this raises for community cohesion.
Subject
Urban and Rural Studies
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