A selection of recent media reports

Nicolas Sarkozy threatens to strip citizenship from immigrants who target police
President Nicolas Sarkozy has given warning that France will strip French nationality from any immigrant who uses violen...
Daily Telegraph (30-Jul-2010)
'Immigrants' arrested at care home
Thirteen suspected illegal immigrants have been detained following a raid at a nursing home, the UK Border Agency (UKBA)...
Evening Standard (30-Jul-2010)
UK skills rating sliding
The UK is living on past glories and its economy risks sliding down the international rankings unless the skills of 10.
HRzone.co.uk (30-Jul-2010)
Europe's response to hardline Islam is like a man burning down his house to get rid of an unwanted visitor
I remember an episode of Jerry Springer about a man who, sick of the unwanted sexual attentions of another man, took the...
Telegraph Blogs (30-Jul-2010)
Almost 1,000 wanted criminals on run
Almost 1,000 released prisoners who should have been recalled to jail, including 18 murderers, are at large after the...
Telegraph.co.uk (30-Jul-2010)
100,000 new homes for migrants
Nearly 100,000 new homes must be built every year for immigrants according to ministers. That amounts to four in every....
Sunrise Radio (30-Jul-2010)
Britain to be biggest country in Europe by 2050
Britain will be the biggest country in Europe by 2050, overtaking both France and Germany, according to official project...
Daily Telegraph (30-Jul-2010)
REFUSED ASYLUM SEEKERS HAVE RIGHT TO WORK
FAILED asylum seekers have been told they are allowed to work despite 2.5million jobless Brits struggling on the...
Daily Star (30-Jul-2010)
CAMERON: WE WILL CAP NUMBER OF IMMIGRANTS
A CAP will be imposed on immigration, the Prime Minister vowed yesterday, insisting that voters want more controls over....
Daily Express (30-Jul-2010)
CAMERON IS RIGHT TO BRING IN NEW MIGRATION CONTROLS
THERE seem to be a million and one ways for people from overseas to get into Britain and stay...
Daily Express (30-Jul-2010)
POLICE PROBE MIGRATION RACKET BEHIND 360 SHAM MARRIAGES
A VICAR found guilty yesterday of conducting hundreds of sham marriages is feared to be part of an international...
Scottish Daily Express (30-Jul-2010)
Migrants will end up driving our population higher than Germany's
Britain is destined to become the most heavily populated country in Europe, U.S. experts predicted yesterday.
Mail Online (29-Jul-2010)
VICAR IN MAJOR SHAM MARRIAGES SCAM
A vicar has been found guilty of conducting sham marriages to allow illegal immigrants to stay in...
Daily Star (29-Jul-2010)
Vicar guilty of 360 sham marriages
A vicar has been found guilty of conducting hundreds of sham marriages to help illegal immigrants gain residency in...
Yahoo! News UK & Ireland (29-Jul-2010)
Vicar guilty of conducting 360 sham marriages for illegal African immigrants | Mail Online
A vicar was found guilty today of conducting hundreds of sham marriages to help illegal immigrants gain residency in..
The Mail On Sunday (29-Jul-2010)
Sham marriages on 'unprecedented scale'
The scale of the sham marriages was on an unprecedented scale involving "classic exploitation" of foreign nationals...
The Independent (29-Jul-2010)
Sarkozy accused of racism for ordering closure of illegal gypsy camps after riot | Mail Online
French President Nicolas Sarkozy has been accused of racism after ordering authorities to dismantle 300 gypsy camps...
The Mail On Sunday (29-Jul-2010)
Cameron: Immigration cap won't affect Indian trade
As David Cameron meets Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in New Delhi on the final day of his trip, he tells Channel....
Channel 4 News (29-Jul-2010)
Two arrested in restaurant raid
IMMIGRATION officers raided an Indian restaurant in Sheffield and arrested two workers on suspicion of being...
Sheffield Telegraph (29-Jul-2010)
Vince Cable's call for immigration cap relaxation is a violation of voters' wishes | Mail Online
The truth is so astonishing that its full implications are hard to comprehend: last year, nearly a third of the...
The Mail On Sunday (29-Jul-2010)

History 6.1

The history of migration to the UK

Summary
1. There was relatively little migration into Britain (other than from Ireland) until New Commonwealth immigration began in the 1950s. Legislation in the early 1970s was intended to reduce this to a trickle. In practice it continued at the rate of half a million acceptances for settlement every decade [1]. This was counterbalanced by emigration until 1983. The net inflow has grown steadily since then. The total net immigration from outside the E.U. has now reached a rate equivalent to about 1.5 million every decade.

Detail
2. There has always been some migration to and from Britain. While people from many countries have lived in Britain for centuries, numbers have generally been small. The historical episodes that are well known - the Huguenots of the 16th and17th century, the Ashkenazi Jews of the late 19th century and others - have been demographically relatively insignificant. Until the1950s there was no really substantial immigration into Britain, except from Ireland, for nearly 1000 years (see paras 9 - 11 below).

3. Commonwealth immigration effectively began in the 1950s but the effect on total population was counterbalanced until 1983 by the emigration of British citizens.

4. Commonwealth citizens were not subject to immigration control until 1st July, 1962 but the Home Office estimate is that the net intake from January 1955 to June 1962 was about 472,000 [2]. In the 1960s they were being admitted at the rate of about 75,000 per year.

5. Racial tension led to successively tighter restrictions on immigration, beginning in 1962. Controls on Commonwealth citizens were brought into line with those already applying to all foreigners. By 1971 it was believed that primary immigration had been brought to an end. (The ethnic population of Britain at that time was about 1 million) Many argued that immigration policy had (implicitly) been "settled" on the following lines: [3]

  - no more primary immigration, but some family reunion
- no major changes or much public discussion of the immigration system
- no encouragement of repatriation of migrants or their descendants
- the promotion of equal opportunities and legislation against   discrimination to facilitate integration.

6. However, in practice, there was only a modest reduction in Commonwealth immigration. The average number of acceptances
for settlement in the 1970s was 72,000 per year, in the 1980s and early 1990s it was about 54,000 per year. Since 1996 that figure has nearly doubled to 97,000 in 1999 [4]. The total since 1963 is nearly 2.5 million.

7. The New Commonwealth ethnic population (including children) was negligible in 1950. In 1971 it was about 1 million. It is now about 4 million or 7% of the population of England and Wales. It will, at least for a period, grow rapidly as a result of natural increase and continuous immigration. Births to all mothers born outside the UK were 14% of the total in 1999. Government projections suggest that
a further 1.5 million immigrants will arrive each decade from outside the EU [5].

8. Accession to the European Union has, to some extent, made Britain part of the European labour market. Migration to or from the E.U. has fluctuated from a net out flow of 11,000 in1993 to a net inflow of 24,000 in 1998.


Previous history: A nation of immigrants?

9.The former Minister for Immigration recently described Britain as a
"nation of immigrants". It is very hard to see what she meant. Since the Norman conquest (1066) there has been relatively little immigration into Britain, perhaps because we are an island nation. English population history is known better than almost any other in the world. And research into surnames and genes confirms that our population has been little affected by immigration for nearly a thousand years. The US State Department website notes that " Contemporary Britons are descended mainly from the varied ethnic stocks that settled there before the 11th century." Instead, Britain has been a country of considerable emigration since the 17th century.

10. Some ebb and flow of migrants is a perfectly normal part of history but, in Britain, major episodes are rare:

  - A small number of Flemings came over to work in the textile industry in the middle ages.
  - Huguenots emigrated to England in two waves. The first wave was in 1572, following the St Bartholomew’s Day Massacre in Paris that year. The second, a much larger wave, began in 1685 following the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in that year. In all, by 1700, approximately 50,000 Huguenots had settled in England. They made up at most, 1% of England's overall population in 1700 of between 5-6 million.[6]
  - A similar number of Jews arrived in the late 19th century, joining a   population that had then reached about 30 million.
- In the 1930s about 70,000 refugees from Nazi Germany were admitted to the UK.
  - After the second world war a considerable number of East Europeans  settled in Britain rather than face Russian occupation. about   80,000displaced persons were recruited for
temporary work.

11. The Irish hardly come into the same category since they were part of Great Britain for centuries. The Irish comprised 3% of the British population in the 1850s, in the aftermath of the potato famine. In the 20th century, the number born in Ireland peaked at 900,000 in the 1970s (2% of the total population). Their number is now falling.

Updated 1 September, 2006

Notes

[1]
Control of Immigration: statistics UK 1999: table 6.6
[2] Control of immigration: statistics UK 1999: table 6.6 footnote 1
[3] Home Office RDS Occasional paper No 67 p.7
[4] as for note 1 table 6.6
[5] as for note 3: Figure 3.5
[6] Mayerlene Frow, Roots of the Future: Ethnic Diversity in the Making of Britain (London: CRE, 1996), p.13