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Research study to probe how the Windrush Scandal unfolded more than 70 years on

Research study to probe how the Windrush Scandal unfolded more than 70 years on HISTORY: Caribbean immigrants arrive at Tilbury Docks in 1945 (Image via Archives) A NEW study will examine how the UK’s “open door” immigration policy resulted in the 2018 Windrush Scandal. Researchers at the University of London’s School of Advanced Study (SAS) have received funding to undertake the project. The Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) will also provide a contributing focus on the history of changes to immigration policy which led to the scandal. SAS academic and lead researcher, Dr Juanita Cox, said: “A six-month scoping project on the Windrush Generation and their relationship to the British State (1948-2018) funded by the University of London’s Convocation Trust pointed to a longer history behind the hostile environment of detention, deportation and denial of citizenship. It highlighted too, a broader interplay between community activism and Caribbean diplomacy.

Black Cultural Archives leave government s Windrush Working Group after unsubstantiated race report

Black Cultural Archives leave government’s Windrush Working Group after “unsubstantiated” race report PILLAR OF THE COMMUNITY: A man performs with drums outside the Black Cultural Archives building (Photo by Thabo Jaiyesimi/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images) FOLLOWING THE publication of the government’s controversial race report, the Black Cultural Archives (BCA) have announced their resignation from its position on the Home Office’s Cross Government Windrush Working Group. The Race and Ethnic Disparities report has faced huge rebuttal from community groups and medical professionals after it claimed to find no evidence of structural racism in the UK. In a statement sent to the government, the BCA said: “Black Cultural Archives refutes the approach and findings of the report on the basis of its poor use of data, unsubstantiated conclusions and British history inaccuracies”.

Photographer, 91, set to light up London

James Barnor/Autograph A British-Ghanaian photographer, whose images captured major social and political changes in London and Accra during the 1950s and 1960s, is having his work exhibited on Piccadilly Circus’s big screens, as part of a major retrospective. James Barnor’s work will be displayed at 20:21 BST, for 150 seconds, every night throughout April, followed by an exhibition at the Serpentine Gallery in May. James Barnor/Autograph Despite a photography career lasting more than six decades, the 91-year-old became widely known only after an exhibition at the Black Cultural Archives in 2007. Born in 1929 in Accra, Barnor worked as a photojournalist before establishing the Ever Young portrait studio in the Ghanaian capital.

How Warner Music Group Is Expanding Social Justice Worldwide

How Warner Music Group Is Expanding Social Justice Worldwide
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