A new way of identifying pockets of deprivation in otherwise affluent areas has caught the attention of local politicians

Most of the 1,700 people who live in a wedge of housing between Iffley Road and Cowley Road in Oxford enjoy relative comfort. There are smart cafes, attic conversions and shops selling high-end bicycles to students and academics attending the world-famous university just over Magdalen Bridge.

In the bald terms of the official 1-10 index of multiple deprivation, it scores a six when the most deprived areas of the country score one. But combing through the 2021 census among the people in this neighbourhood, the new ethnic group deprivation index (EGDI) reveals an otherwise hidden cluster of people who experience significant economic hardship.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Woman dies after being blown over by helicopter in Plymouth, say police

Downdraft toppled 87-year-old on footpath near Derriford hospital helipad and injured one…

Covid-driven recession likely to push 2m UK families into poverty

Joseph Rowntree Foundation study finds destitution was already rising pre-pandemic Destitution levels…

Victoria records five new Covid cases as state battles outbreak into second week of lockdown

New coronavirus cases were recorded from 36,362 tests on day nine of…