Originally posted by ahinton
View Post
An Overcrowded Island? - The Great Myth of Urban Britain
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by ahinton View PostWhat a distasteful comment; I might perhaps have ried to persuade myself to be somewhat less bothered about it if only it had also been funny...
Originally posted by ahinton View PostThe odd thing there is that there are not only very few foreigners in that area compared to almost anywhere in UK but also the range of foreigners is so much less than in UK. ... I've encountered almost no Asians or people from South and Central America and there is also a remarkable paucity even of people from west Africa.
(You have to be able to look behind many of my jokes, which can be allusive & rather more subtle than they first appear)
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostMore distasteful than this?
especially as many of the 'foreigners' you identify in the UK are actually British.Last edited by ahinton; 01-07-12, 09:52.
Comment
-
-
Are the parts of Britain that might be equivelant to the Charente any more ethnically diverse? (I'm not sure what those areas might be - you would have a better idea). My parents' village is about 30 miles south of Oxford, & as far as I've seen there is only one non-white family. Even their nearest town, Didcot, seems pretty mono-ethnic.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostAre the parts of Britain that might be equivelant to the Charente any more ethnically diverse? (I'm not sure what those areas might be - you would have a better idea). My parents' village is about 30 miles south of Oxford, & as far as I've seen there is only one non-white family. Even their nearest town, Didcot, seems pretty mono-ethnic.Last edited by ahinton; 16-07-12, 13:50.
Comment
-
-
Was France a bit stricter about citizens of their empire actually living in France (although as they were classed as citizens of France I'm not sure that's true, & members British empire had a fair bit of difficulty in settling in Britain, even when they had UK passports).
As for Eastern Europeans, perhaps they learn English rather than French & therefore are more likely to move to the UK? I don't know though, & these are really just vague thoughts.
(I didn't think you were making a value judgement in your original comment, any more than I was, about you, in my response. It was more a comment on the type of 'Brit' who moves to Europe but still lives as if they were in Britain, & regards the locals as 'foreigners')
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostWas France a bit stricter about citizens of their empire actually living in France (although as they were classed as citizens of France I'm not sure that's true, & members British empire had a fair bit of difficulty in settling in Britain, even when they had UK passports).
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostAs for Eastern Europeans, perhaps they learn English rather than French & therefore are more likely to move to the UK? I don't know though, & these are really just vague thoughts.
Originally posted by Flosshilde View Post(I didn't think you were making a value judgement in your original comment, any more than I was, about you, in my response. It was more a comment on the type of 'Brit' who moves to Europe but still lives as if they were in Britain, & regards the locals as 'foreigners')
Comment
-
-
Mindwizard
I agree completely with Teamsaint's point. Living as I do in East Sussex, we now have the imposition of 'National Park' status to further pickle existing towns into almost immoveable boundaries and the licence to disallow practically every proposed development on the grounds that it (almost by definition) is in an area of 'outstanding natural beauty'. The result? Town like my own - Lewes - having its twittens and gardens filled in with new developments while perfectly useable non-agricultural plots on the outskirts have absolutely zero chance of getting planning permission for residential use. Yes, my own house has risen hugely in value because of this artificial shortage of land this policy has created. But that is at the expense of my own children, who can not and probably never will be able to afford property in the town of their birth. Worse, the policy has created a very vocal and unashamed community of nimbies - many of whom would not have their own properties had the same rigid anti-housing policies been in place as little as ten or fifteen years ago. We have Mark Easton to thank for at least bringing this scandalous situation to light. That will, as you say, be accompanied by some rather hysterical flak from people who simply will not accept the statistical facts.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Mindwizard View PostI agree completely with Teamsaint's point. Living as I do in East Sussex, we now have the imposition of 'National Park' status to further pickle existing towns into almost immoveable boundaries and the licence to disallow practically every proposed development on the grounds that it (almost by definition) is in an area of 'outstanding natural beauty'. The result? Town like my own - Lewes - having its twittens and gardens filled in with new developments while perfectly useable non-agricultural plots on the outskirts have absolutely zero chance of getting planning permission for residential use. Yes, my own house has risen hugely in value because of this artificial shortage of land this policy has created. But that is at the expense of my own children, who can not and probably never will be able to afford property in the town of their birth. Worse, the policy has created a very vocal and unashamed community of nimbies - many of whom would not have their own properties had the same rigid anti-housing policies been in place as little as ten or fifteen years ago. We have Mark Easton to thank for at least bringing this scandalous situation to light. That will, as you say, be accompanied by some rather hysterical flak from people who simply will not accept the statistical facts.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Mindwizard View PostI agree completely with Teamsaint's point. Living as I do in East Sussex, we now have the imposition of 'National Park' status to further pickle existing towns into almost immoveable boundaries and the licence to disallow practically every proposed development on the grounds that it (almost by definition) is in an area of 'outstanding natural beauty'. The result? Town like my own - Lewes - having its twittens and gardens filled in with new developments while perfectly useable non-agricultural plots on the outskirts have absolutely zero chance of getting planning permission for residential use. Yes, my own house has risen hugely in value because of this artificial shortage of land this policy has created. But that is at the expense of my own children, who can not and probably never will be able to afford property in the town of their birth. Worse, the policy has created a very vocal and unashamed community of nimbies - many of whom would not have their own properties had the same rigid anti-housing policies been in place as little as ten or fifteen years ago. We have Mark Easton to thank for at least bringing this scandalous situation to light. That will, as you say, be accompanied by some rather hysterical flak from people who simply will not accept the statistical facts.
Comment
-
-
Mindwizard
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostWelcome to the Forum, Mindwizard. Surely this all comes back to the overpopulation problem. We all would like to live in a beautiful part of the country. But in order for such a place to exist, there needs to be open space, which National Parks are designed to protect. We also need agricultural land to go some way towards feeding our huge population. Most people who live in beautiful places also want cars (and the posers want 4x4s, which they rarely need) all adding to the space requirements and creating strain on the environment. It was once said that China could support 1 billion poor people, but could never support 1 billion rich people. It may be the same here.
I am extremely open to the arguments for the need to maintain productive agricultural land - that would at least allow for a sensible and hopefully evidence-based debate on how land use might be distributed for the common good. But let's be honest, that is rarely the reason given for restricting development in the UK. The general objection rests on the erroneous assertion that the countryside is on the verge of disappearance. Implicit within that assertion is that the UK is currently over-developed. In my opinion (and that of the UK National Ecosystem Assessment), neither of these arguments is borne out by the facts.
As to whether we are an overpopulated island - the Jersey example aside - the UK is not substantially different in population density than say, Belgium or Germany - yet neither of those countries suffers from the same constipated planning restrictions (and resulting housing shortage) faced in this country.
I would, however, accept that we are an over-crowded island, if only in a very qualified sense. If you pack 56 million or so people into less than 3% of the landscape, the sense of overcrowding is a very visible and palpable one. The fact that anti-development apologists then proceed to divide the total UK land area by 56 million to arrive at a 'people per square kilometre' ratio completely distorts the reality (as Mark Easton's article made clear) that some 98% of the UK landscape is effectively rural and that there is now more woodland in this country than in 1924.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Mindwizard View PostThere are, of course, always legitimate questions to be asked about population density and available resources. In terms of the 'need for open space' argument, I would point to the beautiful and very open island of Jersey. Their population density is approximately double that of England - with a quality of infrastructure, housing and quality of life that puts most of England to shame. So there is no automatic reduction in either beauty, sustainability or access to open countryside because of a greater density of population.
It just takes more effort.
Comment
-
-
Being self sufficient in food is not a good measure of a post industrial society being "overcrowded" imv
our wealth means that we choose to eat asparagus in October
and import many foods that we could easily grow albeit more expensively
it could be argued (and i'm no geographer) that NOT being self sufficient in food production is in some cases a measure of "development"
more people "choosing" to work in towns and cities rather than in agriculture etc
but obviously NOT true everywhere
Comment
-
Comment