Generation Windrush: diasporic landscapes and settlement-Juniper Publishers
Archaeology & Anthropology - Juniper Publishers The Windrush scandal In April 2018, the British government faced widespread public anger and outcry against, and later acknowledged, the mistreatment of hundreds of British Caribbean residents who had settled in the United Kingdom following the Second World War [1]. Migrants from the then British colonies in the Caribbean had been encouraged to cross the Atlantic by the British government and industriesand were offered work permits to help re-build an economy and society decimated by war. West Indian migrants arriving between 1948 and the early 1970s came to be known as the ‘Windrush Generation’, named after the first 492 adults and children arriving from Jamaica, who disembarked from the passenger ship HMT Empire Windrush at Tilbury Docks, London on 22 nd June1948. Migrants and settlers from Caribbean societies have shaped British history and society for centuries, and the transatlantic Caribbean diaspora