Bristol Manifesto for race equality

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The Bristol Manifesto for Race Equality “Batook’s Blueprint” Agenda for a Better Bristol Introduction We believe Bristol is a great city. In 2013 The Telegraph stated, “Bristol is the best city to live in the UK for wealth and happiness.” The European Commission recognised Bristol’s success in creating a green city with a high quality of life by naming the city as European Green Capital 2015. The diversity of races within Bristol played a key part in these recognitions. Yet within this great city, racial inequality still restricts many of Bristol's citizens from sharing in its wealth and happiness. We – members of Black & Minority Ethnic (BME) and equalities communities from Bristol believe that firmly tackling such inequality would secure Bristol’s place as a truly great city, benefiting all Bristol’s citizens. We call on the city to adopt this Manifesto for Race Equality and to work with us to a make Bristol a city that belongs to, and with opportunity for, all who live and work in it regardless of ethnic origin. This Manifesto highlights key areas where racial inequalities persist and where the gaps are widening. We ask public agencies to: commit to positive change in key areas; review progress on a regular basis; and work with us to keep the Manifesto alive. Background Race equality appears to be at a standstill in Bristol. Inequality, lack of social mobility and exclusion from the economic, social, cultural and political spheres are among the key challenges facing Bristol’s BME communities. Such exclusion and inequality, whether it is driven by race, class, gender or any of the other means of dividing our world, has a huge cost. The levels of social mobility in Bristol for most BME communities are today as low as they were in the 1970s. There continues to be a stark under-representation of BME people within mainstream organisations and there is a lack of diversity within the decision makers and leaders of the City. There is a cycle of self-perpetuating poverty, powerlessness and exclusion for BME people, which needs to be broken. This document, written and agreed by local BME people, seeks to provide some practical steps to address the inequalities currently still disproportionately faced by BME communities . We are dealing with inequalities rooted deep into the city’s way of doing politics and economics. We recognise that Bristol is not a special case. This is a national and a global problem. But Bristol has always sought to be a trail blazer and should now forge its very own future at the forefront for improved race equality. This Manifesto is intended to give hope to the increasingly large share of Bristol’s population from BME backgrounds, that ou r children will have better opportunities, for instance, that young black men will be more likely to attend an elite university than go to prison; that they will not be stopped, searched and criminalised but be in leadership positions. It would be to short change the Manifesto and the city to stop there. This Manifesto is for the benefit of all Bristol because the principles of equality cross all boundaries and we endeavour to foster good relations through challenging these lingering inequalities. The aspirations of key race equality advances in the past five decades e.g. race relations legislation, the format ion of the Commission for Racial Equality and development of local Racial Equality Councils, the Stephen Lawrence Inquiry recommendations and consequently the Race Relations Amendment Act have been squandered or are no longer on our agendas. Whilst we welcome the changes in equality legislation and the relevance and importance of the Equality Act 2010 this Manifesto further strengthens the Act with a focus on improved outcomes on race equality. Our current standstill and lack of progress in race equality comes at a time when Bristol has become one of the most diverse cities outside of London, in terms of languages spoken, religions and the number of different ethnic groups. Today, nearly a quarter of Bristol residents are from a BME background (if we include white Irish and other white residents). In our schools the BME community has reached over one third, with a significant proportion being of Somali origin.

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