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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
World
Emily Ashton

UK publishes plan to tackle racial and ethnic inequality

LONDON — Boris Johnson’s government published its blueprint for tackling racial and ethnic inequality in Britain, including a new history curriculum for schools, action on disparities in pay, and policing reforms.

The “Inclusive Britain” strategy was drawn up in response to a government-commissioned review, which controversially found last March that the U.K. was not structurally racist — and that geography, family influence and socio-economic background had a bigger impact on life chances than race.

Still, the report warned that historic racism was causing “deep mistrust” in some communities and made several recommendations. On Wednesday, the government outlined more than 70 actions it would take to tackle disparities and ensure fairness.

These would help “foster inclusion and enable everyone to reach their full potential,” equalities minister Kemi Badenoch said in an emailed statement.

The plans to tackle inequality are a “major step” in delivering Johnson’s promise to “level up” prosperity around the country, the government’s equalities office said. The measures include:

•Establishing a panel of historians to develop a new “model history curriculum” by 2024 to support teaching of “our complex past”

•Developing a new framework for how the use of police powers — such as stop and search — are scrutinized at a local level in order to increase public trust

•Issuing guidance to employers on how to measure and report on differences in ethnicity pay

•Working with industry to collect data on the ethnicity of business owners applying for finance

•Developing regulatory standards and guidance to address potential racial bias in artificial intelligence

Last year’s government-commissioned review was set up following anti-racism protests across the U.K. in 2020, in the wake of the killing of George Floyd in the U.S. It was criticized by opposition politicians, think-tanks and charities, which questioned its independence and findings.

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