The British Conservative Government’s Political Elite, and the European Union: Safeguarding British Interests (With Special Reference to: 2010 – 2016)

The British Conservative Government’s Political Elite, and the European Union: Safeguarding British Interests (With Special Reference to: 2010 – 2016)

The United Kingdom “is probably the most homogeneous of all industrial countries. It is homogeneous because it is small, but this is not the only reason, some smaller countries, like Belgium or Switzerland, have more social diversity than Britain. Moreover, sources of diversity are also present in Britain, as is shown by the division of the United Kingdom into four countries, England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. What makes Britain appear homogeneous is the fact that the population is not uniformly spread in the four countries but hightly concentrated in a small area. In the early part of the nineteenth century, the population of England became much greater than that of the three other countries combined, and a century later, Southern Ireland seceded from the United Kingdom. As a result, over 80% of the whole British populations now reside in England”1. Even in England itself one would find more diversity if the population were uniformly spread over the 50,000 square miles. In fact, the concentration of population is in a strip of territory of roughly half the whole area of England. In all the counties which form the thickly populated area, there live thirty-five million people, or 80% of all English men and two-thirds of the population of the British Isles. “The population is not only heavily concentrated in the centre and South-East. It also came to be agglomerated in large conurbations on a scale which has not been achieved in other industrial countries”2. Almost two-fifths of the British people live in the seven major conurbations and almost one-fifth in the largest of all, the Metropolis. Urban areas are much more important in the social structure of Britain than they are in France, Italy or even Germany. “Within the central part of England the predominance of London increases the homogeneous character of the country. Germany never really had a capital; Italy has two; the supremacy of Paris has had to be imposed. London did not become the political, social, economic, cultural capital of the country as a result of a decision taken by some seventeenth – or eighteenth – century monarch. It has long been unchallenged, even though its predominance may still be resented in many parts of the provinces”3. London is located in such a way that it can easily be reached by the majority of the population and can easily service large masses of people. At least 50% of the population of Britain can go to London on business and return home on the same day. “Things might have been different if, as Paris is to most Frenchmen, London had been as distant to most British people as it is to the Scots”4.

This is a unique website which will require a more modern browser to work!

Please upgrade today!