Has anyone read Goodhart's book? (The British Dream: Successes And Failures of Post-War Immigration).
I felt obliged to, because I went to a debate between him and Daniel Trilling (previously of
New Statesman, now editor of
New Humanist, wrote a book about the BNP). It was "chaired" by Sunny Hundal who was unbelievably smug and hectoring, to the point where Goodhart was barely given the opportunity to say where he was coming from.
I guess it's refreshing to see a self-styled liberal tackling these issues, but it is quite a strange book. He has an OK critique of multiculturalism, but seems to think the solution to segregation is forging a new "national identity" a la Billy Bragg. (He doesn't seem to like working class culture - refers to afro-caribbeans integrating into the "rough end of working class culture" in the sixties).
Also a "national service" based on civic duty for young people, compulsory English lessons with a "student loan" type of repayment. He wants the royal family to be "modernised".
He is big on quotas. Quotas for immigration, quotas for ethnic minorities in schools (but won't go as far as saying that faith schools should be scrapped). And quotas for ethnic minorities on housing estates.
There is a mental bit at the end where he maps out a fictional "best option" plan for the next 20 years which includes David Lammy becoming Mayor of London, the first black prime minister in 2025 and crap pop star Ed Sheeran's conversion to Islam helping to normalise it for young people.
There is a negative review of the book (and subsequent exchange of letters) here
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v35/n12/jonathan-portes/an-exercise-in-scapegoating
If anyone wants my copy, they can have it...