Denmark is pushing ahead with a new immigration policy that will ensure areas of the country have no more than 30 per cent of people from a non-western background.
The new measure is designed to prevent the creation of parallel societies and ‘no go zone’ migrant ghettos which breed crime and ethnic balkanization.
Despite attempts by the United Nations to argue that the policy will create “ethnic discrimination,” over the course of the next 10 years it will ensure that at least 70% of the population living in allocated areas have a western ethnic background.
Citizens from outside the EU, EEA or Switzerland will also be denied municipal housing support as will those with a criminal record.
By pursuing the policy, Denmark has been able to reduce areas officially considered to be “ghettos” from 22 in 2018 down to 15 as of now.
In doing so, it has largely avoided replicating countries like France, where vast numbers of migrants live in ghettos on the fringes of major cities in lawless areas where police are afraid to enter.
Earlier this year, Denmark also began stripping “Syrian refugees” of their residency permits and sending them back home, prompting more bedwetting from left-wing activists.
Perhaps the Danish government implemented the migrant policy after reading a 2019 study by academics from the University of Copenhagen which found that diversity is not a strength.
The study sought to answer whether “continued immigration and corresponding growing ethnic diversity” was having a positive impact on community cohesion.
The researchers found the opposite to be the case.
Studying existing literature and also carrying out a meta-analysis of 1,001 estimates from 87 studies, the researchers concluded, “We find a statistically significant negative relationship between ethnic diversity and social trust across all studies.”
Eric Kaufmann, Professor of Politics at the Birkbeck University of London, also tweeted about the study, commenting, “Higher diversity *is* significantly associated with lower trust in communities, even when controlling for deprivation.”
Higher diversity *is* significantly associated with lower trust in communities, even when controlling for deprivation. A definitive meta analysis of the diversity-trust literature (pub date 2020): https://t.co/IU6v24LaFs
— Eric Kaufmann (@epkaufm) October 7, 2019
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