Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of tables, figures and illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- About the authors
- List of abbreviations
- one Introduction: the social transformation of East London
- two Changing economy and social structure of East London
- three Changing ethnic and housing market structure of East London
- four Moving on, moving out, moving up: aspiration and the minority ethnic suburbanisation of East London
- five Social reproduction: issues of aspiration and attainment
- six The limits to parental decision making under conditions of constrained choice
- seven Reputation and working the system
- eight Conclusions: achieving aspiration?
- References
- Index
eight - Conclusions: achieving aspiration?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 September 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of tables, figures and illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- About the authors
- List of abbreviations
- one Introduction: the social transformation of East London
- two Changing economy and social structure of East London
- three Changing ethnic and housing market structure of East London
- four Moving on, moving out, moving up: aspiration and the minority ethnic suburbanisation of East London
- five Social reproduction: issues of aspiration and attainment
- six The limits to parental decision making under conditions of constrained choice
- seven Reputation and working the system
- eight Conclusions: achieving aspiration?
- References
- Index
Summary
‘What I wanted was get them educated first, good education, good living standards, get some A-levels. I didn't want my children to be a drug dealer. That was my major objective which I achieved.’ (Ugandan Indian, male, Barkingside)
Introduction: the transformation of East London
We have argued in this book that East London has undergone a series of dramatic and far-reaching economic and social transformations over the last 40 years. First, its traditional economic base rooted in the docks and associated manufacturing has largely disappeared to be replaced by a new, service-based, economy. Second, and as a direct consequence of these changes, its occupational class structure has also been transformed. As the previous jobs in manufacturing and the docks have disappeared, so has much of its traditional working class – through retirement, economic inactivity, outmigration and death. They have been replaced in part by a large new white-collar lower middle class, working in non-manual employment often in the burgeoning financial services sector. This is not to say, of course, that the traditional working class has disappeared, but it has shrunk and been transformed. Third, London's ethnic mix has changed over the last 20–30 years, and this change has been particularly dramatic over the last 15 years. London has gone from being an overwhelmingly white, mono-ethnic city in the 1960s and 1970s to one in which minority ethnic groups comprised a third of the population in 2001, and this could grow to over 40% by the 2011 Census. As they have expanded in number, they have also expanded geographically, moving out into what were previously largely white suburban areas. At the same time, the white population is also declining and the traditional East End collectivist white working-class culture has been in rapid decline. The new East London that is in the process of emergence is a firmly multi-ethnic one.
Unlike some of the negative urban social changes which have been so tellingly analysed elsewhere by writers such as W.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Ethnicity, Class and AspirationUnderstanding London's New East End, pp. 229 - 244Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2011