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'A heartfelt and packed-with-stats plea to the Left to abandon victimhood indulgence and instead celebrate the varied and extraordinary triumphs of different ethnic minority groups and individuals' Katharine Birbalsingh, headteacher of the Michaela School Beyond Grievance highlights the growing tensions between the liberal cosmopolitanism which defines much of the British political Left, and the patriotic faith-based conservatism that runs deep in many of Britain's ethnic-minority communities. Instead, Rakib Ehsan presents the much-needed case for an inclusive 'social-justice traditionalism'…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
'A heartfelt and packed-with-stats plea to the Left to abandon victimhood indulgence and instead celebrate the varied and extraordinary triumphs of different ethnic minority groups and individuals' Katharine Birbalsingh, headteacher of the Michaela School Beyond Grievance highlights the growing tensions between the liberal cosmopolitanism which defines much of the British political Left, and the patriotic faith-based conservatism that runs deep in many of Britain's ethnic-minority communities. Instead, Rakib Ehsan presents the much-needed case for an inclusive 'social-justice traditionalism' rooted in family, security, and equality of opportunity. 'Rakib Ehsan's insightful book busts the many myths that the liberal Left likes to tell about Britain's diversity and shows that there is strength in the traditional values of our ethnic-minority communities' Lord Maurice Glasman, author of Blue Labour
Autorenporträt
Dr Rakib Ehsan is a research analyst and writer who specialises in matters of social cohesion, race relations and public security. As well as previously working as a senior data analyst at the Centre for Social Justice, his research has been published by think-tanks such as the Henry Jackson Society, Policy Exchange, ResPublica, the Runnymede Trust and the Intergenerational Foundation. Rakib has written for publications including The Telegraph, the Daily Mail , the Independent, Sp!ked, and UnHerd. He is a regular TV and radio commentator including on the BBC, Sky News and LBC. He was born in west London and raised in Luton by a strong, community-minded family of Bangladeshi origin and is a committed trade unionist.