A selection of recent media reports

Racism infects the whole of society
The Metropolitan Police Authority announced recently that the Met is no longer affected by institutional racism. But has...
NewStatesman (04-Sep-2010)
Gardai smash immigration scam
GARDAI have smashed a lucrative scam in which human traffickers were smuggling illegal immigrants into the State. The s...
Irish Independent (04-Sep-2010)
Warning over primary school cuts
A surge in the number of four-year-olds will require primary schools to find an extra 350,000 places over the next four ...
Press Association (03-Sep-2010)
Geert Wilders denounces Australian Muslim leader's call for beheading
Geert Wilders, the maverick Dutch politician, denounced a Australian Muslim leaders call for his beheading for denig...
Telegraph.co.uk (03-Sep-2010)
Murderer dubbed 'The Beast' died from heart disease
A serial rapist dubbed "The Beast" died from heart failure while serving a life term for murdering a 12-year-old girl in...
BBC News England (03-Sep-2010)
Border officials find 15 stowaways in lorries
BORDER officials have stopped 15 stowaways from illegally entering the country in lorries bound for Yorkshire, including...
Yorkshire Post (03-Sep-2010)
Restaurant booze ban as raid nets illegal workers
A Chinese restaurant has been banned from selling alcohol for six months after a raid by immigration officials, gang-bus...
Evening Times (03-Sep-2010)
Tony Blair has rewritten history without modesty or shame
If he wasn't in charge of the country when it all started to go wrong, then who was, asks Jeff Randall.
Daily Telegraph (03-Sep-2010)
1,000 are paid £800 a week housing benefit
MORE than a THOUSAND families rake in a whopping £800 a week or MORE in housing benefit, The Sun can...
The Scottish Sun (03-Sep-2010)
COLONEL GADDAFI MAY BE PAID BY EU TO STOP IMMIGRATION
SENIOR Eurocrats are considering a demand from Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi for billions of pounds of taxpayers cash to...
Scottish Daily Express (03-Sep-2010)
BBC had "massive bias to left:" director general
The director general of the BBC admitted Thursday that his organisation had been guilty of a "massive bias to the left" ...
Yahoo! News UK & Ireland (03-Sep-2010)
RECORD INCREASE IN IMMIGRATION AS POPULATION SOARS
IMMIGRATION sent the population of England and Wales soaring by a record amount last...
Daily Star (03-Sep-2010)
Why do Finland's schools get the best results?
Last year more than 100 foreign delegations and governments visited Helsinki, hoping to learn the secret of their school...
BBC News Southern Counties (02-Sep-2010)
Illegal migrants caught after restaurant raid in Ely
Immigration officers have found three illegal workers and another two illegal migrants during a raid on a Chinese restau...
BBC News England (02-Sep-2010)
Indian student visas fall by half in Australia
The number of Indians granted student visas in Australia during the last financial year has fallen to 29,721, less than ...
Irish Sun (02-Sep-2010)
Illegal immigrants caught at V
THREE men were arrested in the UK Border Agencys first operation at V Festivals Chelmsford site. Officers arrested two ...
Chelmsford Weekly News (02-Sep-2010)
There was massive left-wing bias at the BBC
In his first major interview since giving the MacTaggart Lecture in Edinburgh, Mark Thompson talks about political press...
New Statesman (02-Sep-2010)
Cannabis factory at industrial unit was UK's biggest
The largest cannabis factory found in the UK last year was in an industrial unit in Haddenham, Cambridgeshire.
Lynn News (02-Sep-2010)
Outraged' MEPs attack France over Roma policy
Political groups in the Parliament ready to recommend a formal condemnation of Nicolas...
European Voice (02-Sep-2010)
BBC 'HAD MASSIVE BIAS TO THE LEFT'
The BBC was guilty of a "massive bias to the left" in the past, director general Mark Thompson has...
Daily Star (02-Sep-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.