Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

Muslims face worst job discrimination in Britain

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Nov, 2014 01:45 PM
    Muslims in Britain constitute the worst off community when it comes to employment opportunities, a new research has found, according to media reports Sunday.
     
    Muslim men in Britain were up to 76 percent less likely to have a job of any kind compared to white, male British Christians of the same age and with the same qualifications, The Independent reported, citing a study by researchers Nabil Khattab and Ron Johnston.
     
    Muslim women in the country, on the other hand, were up to 65 percent less likely to be employed than white Christian counterparts, the study found, furthermore.
     
    The researchers relied on data from Britain's Office for National Statistics' Labour Force Survey (LFS) and concluded that Muslims were the most disadvantaged in terms of employment prospects out of the 14 ethno-religious groups in Britain.
     
    Co-researcher Nabil Khattab, of the Bristol University, said the situation was "likely to stem from placing Muslims collectively at the lowest stratum within the country's racial, or ethno-cultural system due to growing Islamophobia and hostility against them.
     
    "They are perceived as disloyal and as a threat, rather than just as a disadvantaged minority," he added.
     
    "Within this climate, many employers (are) discouraged from employing qualified Muslims, especially if there are others from their own groups or others from less threatening groups who can fill these jobs," Khattab said.
     
    He pointed out that the "penalties" for being Muslim got worse when applying for better-paid managerial or professional jobs.
     
    According to Khattab, if this situation persists, it would not augur well for the cohesion of Britain's multi-ethnic and multicultural society.
     
    "The exclusion of well-qualified black and Muslim individuals could undermine their willingness to integrate (with) the wider society," he noted.
     
    Among men, Indian Muslims were 37 percent less likely to be in work, Pakistani Muslims 59 percent, white Muslims 64 percent and Bangladeshi Muslims 66 percent less likely, the study found.
     
    Among women, on the other hand, Indian Muslims were 55 percent less likely to have a job, white Muslims 43 percent and Bangladeshi Muslims 51 percent less likely.
     
    Of those in work, the researchers found only 23 percent and 27 percent of Bangladeshi Muslims and Pakistani Muslims, respectively, had a salaried job.
     
    White British Jews, with 64 per cent, had the highest rate among those in salaried jobs, followed by Hindu Indians and white Christian Irish, with 53 percent and 51 percent, respectively.
     
    Khattab noted: "The main components of this discrimination are skin colour and culture, or religion. But colour is dynamic, which means white colour can be valued in one case, but devalued when associated with Muslims. Equally, having a dark skin colour -- Hindu Indians, for example -- is not always associated with any significant penalty."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Pakistan to send home 40 Indian prisoners

    Pakistan to send home 40 Indian prisoners
    Pakistan has said it will repatriate 40 Indian prisoners, including 35 fishermen, Saturday through the Wagah land border....

    Pakistan to send home 40 Indian prisoners

    Pope Francis set for Turkey visit

    Pope Francis set for Turkey visit
    At the start of the three-day tour he is set to meet newly-elected President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara, BBC reported Friday....

    Pope Francis set for Turkey visit

    Plane carrying MH17 victims' remains arrives in Netherlands

    Plane carrying MH17 victims' remains arrives in Netherlands
    A Dutch military plane carrying the remains of victims onboard the Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 arrived at the Eindhoven Air Base in Netherlands Friday....

    Plane carrying MH17 victims' remains arrives in Netherlands

    How Nepal's Prime Broke The Impasse Between India, Pakistan

    How Nepal's Prime Broke The Impasse Between India, Pakistan
    Nepal Prime Minister Sushil Koirala played a crucial role in ending the impasse between India and Pakistan during the retreat at Dhulikhel near here Thursday on the sidelines of the 18th Saarc Summit.

    How Nepal's Prime Broke The Impasse Between India, Pakistan

    Indian Diaspora Doubts British Sincerity On Gandhi Statue in Parliament

    Indian Diaspora Doubts British Sincerity On Gandhi Statue in Parliament
    Ahead of the proposed installation of a statue of Mahatma Gandhi at the British parliament, a section of the Indian diaspora has expressed scepticism about the British government's motive behind the move and instead favoured redressal of their concerns as a real tribute to the Father of the Nation.

    Indian Diaspora Doubts British Sincerity On Gandhi Statue in Parliament

    Uneasy Calm Returns To Ferguson As Protests Continue Nationwide

    Uneasy Calm Returns To Ferguson As Protests Continue Nationwide
    An uneasy calm returned to Ferguson Thursday after two nights of unrest over a grand jury's decision not to indict a white police officer in the shooting death of an unarmed black teenager in August.

    Uneasy Calm Returns To Ferguson As Protests Continue Nationwide