Policy Work
What does our policy department contribute to our delivery?
The BSWN policy department contributes at the root of our mission to support the development of dynamic, independent and strong Black and Minoritised communities, businesses and organisations in the South West. It reveals the barriers to accessing opportunities, and highlights local and regional needs, enabling us to design and improve our projects in order to catalyse change and have a tangible impact.
Our work influences policy at local, regional and national levels by engaging with leading thinkers on the most pressing issues facing the individuals and communities we work with. We believe in evidence-based policy which is centred on the experiences of those most affected by it, and the key to this approach is carrying out our own research. We publish our findings extensively here. Below are some of our most recent policy submissions and reports.
Our policy page includes both the policy we helped consult on, as well as influential reports we believe are relevant to our work and informs our focus. Read BSWN research and impact reports.
Policy Briefs
It is clear how ethnic disparities within the labour market are linked to other disparities in policy such as housing, and influenced by national crises such as the cost of living crisis. Issues within the labour market leads to wage disparity between minoritised communities and their White counterparts.
The Renters Reform Bill is currently in its 2nd reading in the House of Commons and will legislate the reforms set out in the A Fairer Private Rental Sector White Paper published in June 2022. The White Paper aims to reform the Private Rented Sector (private rental sector).
This is a summary of the impact of the government’s autumn budget on Black and Minoritised people. It covers changes to taxes, public spending, health and social care, wages, pensions, and benefits. Throughout the fiscal year of 2021-22, indicators of economic growth have been moving towards constriction. With the announcement of Chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s Autumn Budget (2022), the UK has officially entered into a period of recession.
The Grenfell Tower tragedy of 2017 lifted the veil over the abundant problems in the Social Housing sector; where a resident warning about serious fire risk within the building was labelled a “troublemaker” by the housing management, and a year later, found himself having to escape with his life in a fire that caused 72 bereavements.
In mitigating the effects of the Cost-of-Living Crisis, it is first important to set it within the context of the pre-existing economic disparity that has always prevailed within the South West; that disproportionately disadvantages Minoritised communities.
Since the release of the autumn budget, the UK has seen a rapid increase in the cost of living with prices increasing by 6.2% in the 12 months prior to February 2022. This is expected to rise to 9% by the end of the calendar year.
Monday 22 June marked the 3rd year of Windrush Day, a day honouring the Caribbean community and the half a million people who travelled to the UK after the WW2 - a commemoration which Patrick Vernon had been campaigning for since 2013.
While the report acknowledges overt racism, it argues that institutional racism is not borne out of the evidence. This is despite the fact that racialised communities have disproportionately negative outcomes in every key social policy area.
BSWN with key partners VOSCUR and Locality launched the report of a 9-month city-wide research project exploring the response of Bristol’s VCSE Sector to the pandemic and the potential of the sector in the city moving forward.
Submissions
The Bristol Living Rent Commission was created in 2022 to investigate how to make Bristol a “living rent city.” The report is an investigation into the private rental sector in Bristol and rent control measures, concluding with 29 recommendations including engaging the government on a national rent control system and devolving powers to the city-level to control rents. BSWN contributed written evidence on ethnic disparities within the private rental sector to the Commission.
Ethnic minorities account for around 14 percent of the UK population (ONS, 2011) and while all British ethnic minority groups have made progress in employment, occupational mix, labour force participation and education relative to the white majority, ethnic minorities still do less well than most white people in most socioeconomic areas.
The overall objectives of the proposal are at odds with the UK’s international legal obligations. The proposals fail to consider or discuss the incorporation of any other international human rights standards into UK law.
We, along with our colleagues at Campaigners Stroud Against Racism, believe that the statue is based on demeaning imagery of a time gone by when Gloucestershire profited from the Transatlantic Trafficking of Enslaved Africans.
The government has called for evidence on ethnic disparities and inequality in the UK, this is a joint submission between us and Bristol’s Commission on Race Equality (CoRE).
Statements
On the 18th of June, 2023, The Times reported on the Government’s purported plans to unveil more restrictive rules on social housing allocation. The article, entitled “Britons ‘to be priority (sic) on council house lists’” outlines ministerial concerns regarding the inordinate waiting times experienced by more than a million households patiently waiting for social housing (The Times 2023).
BSWN recognises that the United Kingdom has many steps to take before it is a racially just society. CODE’s Evidence for Equality National Survey (EVENS) report, juxtaposed against previous reports on Racial Inequality, is unabashed in its claim that racism extends past singular, isolated instances of individual choice.
Following on from our Submission to Just Fair month we are one of 82 organisations calling on the UK Government to respect human rights in the UK after many UN member states highlighted failures across the board. On Thursday the 10th of November member states of the UN Human Rights Council called on the UK Government to take action to better realise rights in the UK.
The website in question was created as an integrated service from which the public can access government data on racial disparities in the UK.
As part of the Government legal limits for pollution, we need to introduce a Clean Air Zone to ensure Bristol meets those limits within the shortest possible time. Bristol’s Clean Air Zone will start in summer 2022.
The virulent attacks on the Mayor and Deputy Mayor should not be isolated and seen as heated anger on the eve of elections. They resonate with the killing of so many people of African descent in recent years.
Following the disproportionate impact of Covid-19 on Black, Asian and minority ethnic people, it is concerning that these very groups are not a higher priority for the vaccine rollout as access to this is only set to increase that divide.
The unequal impact of the pandemic on African and Asian heritage groups goes beyond infection and mortality rates. Research has shown that people from these backgrounds are likely to be worse affected by the lockdown.
This is a joint statement to the Equality and Human Rights Commission, by Black South West Network (BSWN) and Bristol’s Commission on Race Equality (CoRE).
Covid case numbers have been rising rapidly across the UK and the government has therefore introduced another lockdown in order to control the spread of the virus.
Joint Submissions with CoRE
We welcome guest blogs in the form of opinion pieces, interviews, news items, or vlogs. Our policy and advocacy work covers a variety of areas such as health, housing, education, and access to justice, but ultimately should be focused on Black and Minoritised communities and racial justice. We try to make our blogs as accessible as possible so please try to avoid complicated jargon. Please ensure that all information provided is fact-checked. All sources must be cited in the piece and/or images supplied should be accompanied with full credit.
If you would like to produce something, please provide an outline title and summary with key points to our Senior Policy Officer, at angelique@bswn.org.uk. If possible, please include previous writing that you have produced. Please also get in touch if you have produced a piece of work exploring race, ethnicity, identity, or heritage.
We would love to share it!
This is a summary of the Government’s recently passed Illegal Migration Act 2023 and its impact on migrants arriving in the United Kingdom. This summary will cover the Act’s estimated costs to the United Kingdom’s economy, its impact on incoming migration and asylum seeking, possible human rights implications, and the potential strain it may put on local governments and legal aid providers.