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The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Fernando Trujillo. Concepts and Terms. The United Kingdom Great Britain England, Scotland, Wales & Northern Ireland. Size (km 2 ). Population [1]. England. 129,634. 49,536,600. Wales. 20,637. 2,918,700. Scotland. 77,179.

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The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

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  1. The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland Fernando Trujillo

  2. Concepts and Terms • The United Kingdom • Great Britain • England, Scotland, Wales & Northern Ireland

  3. Size (km2) Population [1] England 129,634 49,536,600 Wales 20,637 2,918,700 Scotland 77,179 5,054,800 N. Ireland 13,438 1,696,600 Geography North to South: 955 kms; East to West: 483 kms (approx.) [1] Fuente: http://www.statistics.gov.uk/

  4. Geography

  5. History • Celtic communities: from 600 BC • Romans: from 55 BC until circa 440 • Germanic tribes: Angles, Saxons, Frisians and Jutes • From first half of 5th century to 1066. • Scandinavian tribes: from 8th to 11th centuries • Normans: from 14th October 1066 (up to 14th century)

  6. History

  7. History: sample of migrations • Between 11th & 13th centuries • Pre-capitalist migrations: Normans, Italians, Flemish, Dutch, Germans. • Between 16th & 17th centuries • Ideological, religious and economic migrations: French Huguenots, Dutch Protestants, Gipsies, African Slaves. • 20th century: • Increase in immigration from the Commonwealth, notably the Indian sub-continent (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh ) and the Caribbean. • Increase in migration to and from other EU member states. • Increase in the number of people seeking asylum in Britain: asylum-seekers from the Balkans, the Middle East, and South Asia (particularly the former Yugoslavia, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Sri Lanka)

  8. Migrations • Ethnic minorities are not spread evenly throughout the country. • The ethnic minority population, 47 per cent of whom had been born in Britain, is young and growing. • Blacks and Bangladeshis in the professions are so few that they don’t show up in the percentages (...) but Indians, both male and female, are highly represented here. Unskilled jobs are largely done by Blacks and Whites (though the percentage of Blacks is double of the Whites). • The highest percentage of overall unemployment is to be found among the Pakistanis and Bangladeshis, at 27.9 per cent, with Blacks only a shade less badly off. But Blacks were worst off with regard to long-term (over a year) unemployment, at 15.8 per cent (...) Among Whites, by contrast, overall unemployment was at 9.1 per cent and long-term at 4.0 per cent. • Slowly, Black and Asian numbers were increasing in the police forces, as also in local government and many other walks of life. • In the five years 1988-93, reported racist attacks doubled. § Marwick, A. 1996. British Society since 1945. London: Penguin.

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