Barrow Cadbury Trust in the press
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Barrow Cadbury Trust announces new £750,000 funding initiative: 'Habits of Solidarity'
01.07.08 - Barrow Cadbury Trust
The Barrow Cadbury Trust has launched a new funding stream aimed at fostering greater cohesion in some of Britain’s most diverse towns and cities.
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Changing face of Britain
01.07.08 - Times Online
Demographic change is one of the most volatile challenges facing councils today. It affects almost everything that local authorities do, from managing school rolls to supporting social cohesion and economic development.
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We can still immigration fears by ensuring access to public services for all
23.06.08 - Progress Online
According to pollsters Ipsos Mori, only crime ranks higher than migration in the list of voters' concerns, with some three-quarters of the public considering migration ‘a problem'.
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Finance Briefs
10.06.08 - Regeneration & Renewal
Charity the Barrow Cadbury Trust has launched a £750,000 fund for voluntary and community projects
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New fund launched for community relations projects
09.06.08 - Third Sector Online
A £750,000 fund has been launched for community projects that work to improve relations between different ethnic and religious groups.
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Children 'crucial to Brum integration'
23.05.08 - Regeneration & Renewal
Almost half of the residents of one the UK's most ethnically diverse cities made friends from other racial groups thanks to their children, says a survey.
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In place of drums and samosas
14.05.08 - Society Guardian
In a 'super diverse' Britain, the key to social cohesion is not a new British 'identity' but tackling poverty and inequality.
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From Birmingham to Brazil, young people find safety in the net
14.05.08 - The Times
Teenagers today, goes the complaint of many parents, spend more time in a virtual, online world than they do in the real one. But, as two very different projects on opposite sides of the globe demonstrate, young people are also harnessing 21st-century tec
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Ethnic groups 'get on together'
09.05.08 - BBC News Online
Most people get along successfully with people from other ethnic backgrounds, research has suggested.
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Birmingham residents fear impact of immigration
09.05.08 - Birmingham Post
Many Birmingham residents fear immigration will lead to worse public services and more competition for jobs, a major new study has shown.
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