
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Parallel lives and ‘the other’ Parallel lives and ‘the other’
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History History
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Contemporary moments Contemporary moments
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Place Place
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The ‘white working class’: locating racism with the other Other The ‘white working class’: locating racism with the other Other
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History History
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Contemporary moments Contemporary moments
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Place Place
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New arrivals: reimagining multiculture New arrivals: reimagining multiculture
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History History
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Contemporary moments Contemporary moments
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Place Place
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Super-diversity: where old problems become new solutions? Super-diversity: where old problems become new solutions?
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History History
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Contemporary moments Contemporary moments
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Place Place
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Conclusions Conclusions
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Two Contradictory narratives of cohesion
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Published:September 2013
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Abstract
Understanding community cohesion policy as bound to particular events, times and places conjures a set of easily digestible stories which can be readily referred to in conversation and negotiations (riots in Oldham in 2001; election of racist councillors in Barking and Dagenham in 2006; new migration into Peterborough throughout the 2000s; long-standing diversity in Hackney). Within these narratives there is much to be learned from observing what is silenced, as well as what is spoken. This chapter provides both a factual background to the key events in the development of community cohesion policy, and a guide to some of the ways these moments have been and can be fitted together to make sense of policy worlds.
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