Part two: “thirty-seven years later - the UK migrant crisis” Deconstructing the erosion of British national sovereignty

Antony D. Miller *

Research & Post Graduate Studies, School of Humanities. Department of International Relations & Journalism, Otgontenger University, 13370, 51 Jukov Str., Enkhtaivan Avenue. Bayanzurkh District. Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.
 
Review Article
World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2024, 23(03), 2603–2624
Article DOI10.30574/wjarr.2024.23.3.2923
 
Publication history: 
Received on 11 August 2024; revised on 24 September 2024; accepted on 26 September 2024
 
Abstract: 
This part two body of work 37 years after this researcher’s first delving into immigration entitled “The Worst is Yet to Come. The Challenges of Multiculturalism in Britain: An Examination of Over-Migration, Assimilation, and A Warning for the Future.” (1987). This investigation will seek to dissect the administrative practices that have allowed for unshackled policies on immigration to be sustained in the United Kingdom for six decades and undermine the tenets for the checks and balances in a democracy. Why has the British public become so subjugated that it accepted over-migration without any initial protest in the past and had waited for a tragedy of three little girls to occur,  and to finally revolt against the state - notably the recent summer of rioting. This study investigates how a once influential nation, became acquiescent to a dangerous level of devaluation.  A comparison was made with the repressive attitude of Poland towards immigration of dissimilar faith, specifically resulting, in zero terrorist activity that has been observed in their country. The research explores the extent to which ethnic stability can be expected with over-immigration - addressing factors such as tolerance, the state of the economy (Nash’s Equilibrium) and alternative models of social integration. It is also recorded from the results that the United Kingdom has failed in its policies regarding immigration which has caused social problems, cultural disquiet, and economic pressures that have put at risk the societal structure or the fabric of Britain itself. Concerning the theoretical contributions,  the study squarely cites the lack of responsibility or poor governance from all political parties. Their neglect of nation sovereignty even though, governments have critical role that they play in ensuring the protection and welfare of its native citizenry. Finally, this research will serve as a warning to other neoliberal oriented nations of which ignore their fellow citizenry’s well-being.
 
Keywords: 
Migration; Immigration Policy; Indigenous; Government; Socialism
 
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