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Kehinde Andrews

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Gender Male
Age 41
Date of birth January 1,1983
Full nameKehinde Nkosi Andrews
Education University of Birmingham
AffiliationsBirmingham City University
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID455419
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Kehinde Andrews Life story


Kehinde Nkosi Andrews is a British academic and author specialising in Black Studies. Andrews is a Professor of Black Studies in the School of Social Sciences at Birmingham City University.

Lloyds of London to invest £40m over 'significant' slavery links

Lloyds of London to invest £40m over 'significant' slavery links
Nov 8,2023 10:11 am

... But Kehinde Andrews, Professor of Black Studies at the University of Birmingham, described the move as a " PR exercise" and " frankly offensive"...

Tory leadership: What the diverse line-up means for UK politics

Tory leadership: What the diverse line-up means for UK politics
Jul 14,2022 2:40 pm

... Kehinde Andrews, professor of Black Studies at Birmingham City university, said: " It is the most diverse government in history, but it also has the most racist policies of any government...

George Floyd: Five factors behind the UK Black Lives matter protests

George Floyd: Five factors behind the UK Black Lives matter protests
Jun 13,2020 8:09 am

... The statue of Edward Colston was rolled through the streets on the way to the port Kehinde Andrews, a professor of black studies at Birmingham City University, suggests that the movement may have played in the success in increasing support from white people a role in the removal of the Colston statue...

George Floyd protests: What to do with white privilege and ally mean?

George Floyd protests: What to do with white privilege and ally mean?
Jun 6,2020 3:51 am

... Kehinde Andrews is a professor of black studies at Birmingham City University, Director of the centre for Social research, founder of the organization of Black unity, and co-chair of the Black Studies Association...

Liam Neeson film's red carpet event cancelled amid racism row

Liam Neeson film's red carpet event cancelled amid racism row
Feb 16,2020 2:45 am

... Kehinde Andrews, a professor of black studies at Birmingham City University, told the BBC Neeson s comments were completely inappropriate and offensive and to make them as he promoted a film was distasteful ...

Liam Neeson says he's 'not racist' after rape comments in interview

Liam Neeson says he's 'not racist' after rape comments in interview
Feb 16,2020 2:44 am

... Kehinde Andrews, a professor of black studies at Birmingham City University, said Neeson s comments were completely inappropriate and offensive and to make them as he promoted a film was distasteful ...

George Floyd: Five factors behind the UK Black Lives matter protests

Feb 16,2020 2:44 am

Crowds of People filled Trafalgar Square in London But protests were held in many of the smaller towns and communities

A shocking death caught on video in The United States provoked protests throughout the UK, and a national debate about England's history.

But what are some of the topics asked in The United Kingdom, so many react so strongly to The Killing of George Floyd 4000 Miles Away ?

1. Witness The Police tactics

It was the "absolute brutality" of George Floyd's death and the fact That he was caught, on video, the People mobilized to come Out and protest in the UK, Says Remi Joseph-Salisbury, scientists at the University of Manchester and an organizer of the Racial Justice Network.

And he Says That incidents are increasingly recorded in the UK, such as the Material in Manchester last month. The Police are investigating The Incident .

"People will start to connect The Dots , in the UK," Says Dr. Joseph Salisbury, citing the video from home and. The Police are investigating the case of Mr Francis. In the case of Wretch 32 's father, police say a review had found no evidence of misconduct.

Official figures show That police in England and Wales as a white person, and in 2018-19.

"The United Kingdom is innocent," was one of the protest-rallying cries

Black People were also More Than .

Dr. Joseph Salisbury Says , it has sometimes mobilize difficult-to-UK protesters in The Past . "The UK likes to think of themselves as much less racist than The United States," he Says .

But , he Says , the abuse on video, a powerful factor of Motivation were recorded. "It is a little more sport, and more urgently, what is happening in This Time . "

2. Deaths in the custody of The Police

Since 1990, it 1,743 People in England and Wales who died were investigation, after contact with The Police , according to The Charity .

As a proportion of the population in these countries, and the power, or the restraint is More Than twice as likely to be involved in the death.

And Ken Fero, a spokesman for The United friends and families campaign provides for those whose family members died after contact with The Police , there is increasing evidence That this is a story of deaths in prison, motivating the protesters.

The name of The British men who died in custody, Sean Rigg appeared next to US victims on posters

names such as, and appeared on posters and were chanted by the protesters.

"With the Young People , the protest, in The Moment , and it seems Young People , there is a stronger sense of history and consciousness, as it has been in The Past ," he Says .

It is also a feature of the Black Lives Matter protests in The United States, The Names of those who died due to police violence a focus of the demonstrations and online activism, with the hashtag #saytheirnames.

"When Ordinary People start to talk about it, tweet about it, protested about it, to talk when celebrities start using it, if People have a voice, and not the politicians, are talking about - this is what gives them hope," Mr. Fero said the election campaign-families.

3. Coronavirus has said divides the community

protesters, these two "lethal pandemics" - Racism and coronavirus - Must be addressed together, since the data has shown Black Brits in England and Wales with the disease as White People .

The government review of the effects of coronavirus on ethnic minorities, told a similar story, the forward will roll from social and economic inequalities, poverty, crowded housing, used in lower-paid or key workers, as factors for this mismatch.

a Railway Station worker belly Mujinga has become a symbol of inequality during the pandemic

the People from the Black and other ethnic minorities have also been hit harder financially in The Crisis , as the research has shown, they are more likely to work in the shut-down sectors or precarious jobs

belly Mujinga, a railway ticket office clerk in London died, the spit is with the coronavirus after according to reports, has become a symbol during the protests That these socio-economic differences"Black lives do matter. Belly the life it represented," the posters read.

More Than 1. 5 million People now have a petition for "justice signed" for the 47-year-old, born in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, after The British Transport police closed the case due to a lack of evidence.

As an ethnic minority continues to be the main burden of the labor, health and socio-wearing-economic implications of this pandemic, which many hope protective measures are initiated in the near future.

4. Education About Britain 's colonial past,

Even before the UK had a Black Lives matter movement, she had the Rhodes have to the fall campaign. Inspired by similar movements in South Africa , it tries to remove, to focus on The Statue of Oriel College imperialist patron, Cecil Rhodes , and the reform of the University of Oxford in the resume, less to the white Europeans.

On Sunday, the debate on the symbols of The British colonial past, moved from science to The Streets , as the protesters at The Statue of the slave-dealer Edward Colston moved into Bristol City Centre and threw him in the Harbor.

The Action recalled a similar forced relocation of demonstrators to the Confederate memorials in the U.S. States such as North Carolina and Georgia .

The Statue of Edward Colston was rolled through The Streets on The Way to the port

Kehinde Andrews , a professor of Black studies at Birmingham City University, suggests That The Movement may have played in the success in increasing support from White People a role in the removal of the Colston statue.

"cracks If you look at who is The Statue , it was mostly white protesters. You can it with things we don't," Says us likely.

"If you have a majority of Black protest, not tearing down a statue like That , I'm not sure what the answer is - by The Police , let alone the media. "

5. The Windrush scandal damaged trust in the authority

If Black Lives matter began in the UK in 2016, Patrick Vernon Says it was a youth-led movement was not taken very seriously by the older Black People .

The Movement began in protest against The Police killings were of Black People in The United States, The United Kingdom, as a coalition of Black activists opposing unjust of The Police and other forms of Racism .

in The Next two years, Mr Vernon Says , the elderly, which changed their opinion.

First, the Grenfell Tower was set on fire in the year 2017, which led to the death of 72 People , many of them Black and Asian, in the midst of allegations of official neglect. Then, the Windrush scandal was created in the year 2018, said with thousands of People from the Commonwealth countries in The Caribbean and in Africa all wrong and you were in the UK illegally.

Mr. Vernon, a mouthpiece for the Windrush victims, said the People lost their homes, their jobs and were deported after a "traumatic effect".

"It raises the vexing question, are we British? We are really British? Are we valued? Is estimated our contribution in This Country ? The whole Black Lives matter, which is crystallized," he Says .

Black Lives matter is an increasingly multi-generational protest in the UK, some

to say This series of questions, the Black communities has made the People more willing to and to demonstrate, Mr Vernon suggests.

"you are now activists because they are fighting for their rights to stay in This Country or for their compensation," he Says .

"you don't want to take action, because the current democratic process works for People . "



Source of news: bbc.com

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