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The recent Sewell report has come

Posted: Thu Feb 06, 2025 9:59 am
by asimj1
Very simply put, racism is not considered to be a ‘damaging enough’ issue and hence does not feature high on policy agendas.

However, the overwhelming evidence that details ethnic inequalities in health, employment, education, housing and almost every other important life domain from the past 5 decades indonesia rcs data and during the pandemic, makes it much harder for the government to completely ignore and continue with a strategy of inaction on racial injustice veiled by race reports.

Under heavy fire from leading race equality charities, academics, activists, professionals in many sectors, and most recently by the UN Human Rights Council. I am hopeful that the evidence that we as researchers are generating during the pandemic will contribute to a positive change for race equality, but the change will be slow given the current policy climate.



Do you think there are new and innovative opportunities here through collecting data through means other than surveys and using textual analysis for example?