A selection of recent media reports

Why are we paying to educate EU students in our universities?
Boris Johnson says the next PM should take a leaf out of Margaret Thatcher's book and demand a rebate.
Daily Telegraph (22-Mar-2010)
Row over anti-fascist clashes during protests in Bolton
Unite Against Fascism (UAF) leaders have disputed claims from police that their supporters were "extremely violent" duri...
BBC News Beds, Bucks & Herts (21-Mar-2010)
EU's down and outs sent home from Britain
Hundreds of destitute East Europeans are to be deported from Britain. Two Poles were the first to go earlier this month...
The People (21-Mar-2010)
DAVID CAMERON: COMMON SENSE REVOLUTION FOR PEOPLE POWER
DAVID CAMERON yesterday pledged to herald a common sense revolution and bring an end to the tick-box culture that is hol...
Daily Express (21-Mar-2010)
Is France right to ban wearing the burka in public?
Egyptian-born columnist and lecturer Mona Eltahawy argues in favour of the proposed French ban on the burka in public; a...
Guardian.co.uk (21-Mar-2010)
We must trust in basic British decency to beat the racist BNP
The communities minister argues for a different approach to tackling the far right in the coming...
Guardian Unlimited - Comment is Free (21-Mar-2010)
Police battle to control EDL and UAF protest in Bolton
Police are trying to contain thousands of demonstrators from the English Defence League (EDL) and Unite Against Fascism ...
BBC News Beds, Bucks & Herts (20-Mar-2010)
Rise in marriages between cousins 'putting children at risk of birth defects', warns Baroness
A rise in the number of marriages between cousins in Britain has prompted calls for a crackdown on the practice amid war...
The Mail On Sunday (20-Mar-2010)
Jail for illegal immigrant who tended to drugs
An illegal immigrant caught tending to 350 plants in a cannabis factory has been jailed for two...
This is Leicestershire (20-Mar-2010)
MIGRANTS FOUND LIVING IN FAMILY TREE HOUSE
SQUATTERS have set up a tree house after invading the gardens of family homes. They have constructed makeshift shelters...
Daily Star (20-Mar-2010)
UK BETTER OFF OUT OF EU
THE only way to solve Britains economic and immigration problems is to leave Europe, the UK Independence Party said last...
Daily Express (20-Mar-2010)
FOREIGN WORKER CURBS ONLY CUT 3,000
TIGHTER rules to cover highly skilled migrant workers will only cut the number of them coming to Britain by about 3,000 ...
Daily Express (20-Mar-2010)
Residents powerless to remove illegal immigrants from their gardens
At first sight, the piles of rubbish and debris strewn across this garden make it look just like a rubbish tip.
Daily Mail (19-Mar-2010)
IMMIGRANT S 16-MILE CHANNEL TUNNEL U-TURN
AN ILLEGAL immigrant walked 16 miles through the Channel Tunnel to the UK before changing his mind and telling police: ...
Daily Express (19-Mar-2010)
MPs debate visa rights for migrant domestic workers
Martin Salter, Labour MP for Reading West, opened a debate in Westminster Hall to highlight the abuse of migrant domesti...
The United Kingdom Parliament (18-Mar-2010)
Immigrant flees 'racist' Brits
AN exhausted illegal immigrant spent hours trying to cross into the UK before abandoning the attempt because Brits "ar...
Online Sun (18-Mar-2010)
Le Pen's back, and winning again
Fuelled by Nicolas Sarkozy's anti-Muslim 'identity' debate, the Front National is punching above its weight in regional....
Guardian.co.uk (18-Mar-2010)
Heads should be able to fire BNP teachers, says David Cameron
Tory leader's attempt to reach out to black voters continues at event in south-east...
Guardian.co.uk (18-Mar-2010)
£60k sex swap for migrant
A TURKISH transsexual woman granted UK asylum is having at least £60,000-worth of NHS surgery to become a man called...
Online Sun (18-Mar-2010)
Minister announces over £750,000 of Inclusion Grant Funding
Social Justice and Local Government Minister Carl Sargeant has announced £766,190 of funding to support organisations th...
Welsh Assembly Government (17-Mar-2010)

History 6.2

A Nation of Emigrants - Emigration from the UK

Summary
1. Britain is a nation of emigrants, not of immigrants. Since the middle ages our people have spread to all the corners of the globe; the country's dominant migration experience has been to send people abroad, rather than to receive them from overseas. The balance did not change until the early 1980s.

Detail
2. Henry VII encouraged John Cabot in his transatlantic ventures to Newfoundland at the end of the 15th century, around the same time as Columbus. From Elizabeth to the Stuarts, emigration to the new colonies in the Americas and elsewhere became an established part of English - and later Scottish and Irish - life. As always, motives were mixed; opportunity, improvement, making a fortune, freedom for unpopular religious views, greed. Some encouragement was given to emigration of the poor, from Tudor to Victorian times, to relieve the burden on Parish rates.

3. There are no direct data worth mentioning until the 19th century, but indirect estimates suggests a net emigration of between 5000 - 7000 people per year from the 16th to the end of the 18th century [1]: about a quarter of the natural increase. By the later 19th century we know from direct data that up to 90,000 persons per year were leaving Britain. That was a major demographic contribution to the great democracies of Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States. Peak emigration from the British Isles was reached in the last years of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th. Over 11 million British and 7 million Irish emigrants joined the total of about 52 million Europeans who emigrated across the Atlantic from 1815 to 1930 [2]. Many returned, of course - perhaps a third of those who left. Return migrants from the US exceeded emigrants from the UK in the 1930s- during the depression it was better to be back in Britain. That episode was one of the very few occasions in the last 300 years when net migration to the UK was positive, apart from the last two decades of rising immigration from the third world.

4. After the second world war migration resumed on a large scale, encouraged by government and Commonwealth schemes of various kinds, which did not end until the 1960s. While emigration to the US never exceeded about 13,000 per year after the mid 1960s, the net loss by emigration to the Old Commonwealth (Australia, Canada and New Zealand) was 104,000 people as late as 1974. (This outflow continues today on a smaller scale but is largely counterbalanced by the popularity of the UK with young working holidaymakers from Australia and elsewhere.) Even the very large immigration from the New Commonwealth which got under way in the 1950s and which
still continues, was smaller than the net outflow of British citizens
until the early 1980s. In the last two decades Britain has become a country of net immigration, thus reversing the historical trend of previous centuries..

10 August, 2001

Notes

[1]

[2]
Wrigley, E.A. and R.S. Schofield (1981) The Population History of England 1541-1871
- a reconstruction. London, Arnold.
Baines, D (1991) Emigration from Europe 1815 - 1930. London, Macmillan table 2.