Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Nissa Finney is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Nissa Finney.


Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies | 2018

Slippery discrimination: a review of the drivers of migrant and minority housing disadvantage

Sue Lukes; Nigel de Noronha; Nissa Finney

ABSTRACT This paper aims to identify housing disadvantages faced by migrants and ethnic minorities; the legal, policy and market forces that shape them; how they have developed over time; how they are manifest nationally and locally; and how they are being responded to locally by those concerned with mitigating them. The paper thereby intends to provide a foundation to inform future research and policy and to engage with local actors to develop ways of overcoming migrant housing disadvantage and challenging discrimination. The paper finds that the interplay of legal changes, which have increasingly differentiated migrants since the 1940s, and shifting housing markets, has driven exclusion of migrants and minorities such that considerable disadvantage is revealed by analysis of census data. However, attention to local specificity provides evidence of positive responses. Examples are presented in relation to access to affordable housing, enactment of homelessness duties and community actions. Methodologically, this paper highlights the importance of simultaneous consideration of migration and ethnicity as markers of difference and exclusion, and the potential of co-production approaches for socially meaningful research concerned with inequalities.


Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies | 2018

The roles of social housing providers in creating ‘integrated’ communities

Nissa Finney; Bethan Harries; James Rhodes; Kitty Lymperopoulou

ABSTRACT Cohesion and integration agendas in Britain can be characterised by localisation of ‘race relations’ responsibilities and the importance of local institutions in shaping neighbourhoods has been acknowledged. However, little is understood about the roles of housing providers in integration initiatives. Indeed, research on housing and race has experienced a lull in the 2000s. Thus, this paper aims to examine how social housing providers negotiate their positions and are complicit in constructing a certain vision of community. It draws on interviews from the ESRC Centre on Dynamics of Ethnicity (CoDE)’s work in the ethnically diverse neighbourhoods of Cheetham Hill (Manchester), Newham (London), Butetown (Cardiff) and Pollokshields and Govanhill (Glasgow). The paper makes three arguments: first, that race and ethnicity as facets of ‘integration’ have been subsumed into broader agendas, yet remain implicit in community building; second, that housing organisation practices are often detached from local meanings of community and prioritise exclusionary activities focusing on behaviour change and, third, that the roles of housing organisations in constructing ‘integrated’ communities are highly variable and localised, influenced by the history and contemporary dynamics of place.


Area | 2018

Is migration in later life good for wellbeing? A longitudinal study of ageing and selectivity of internal migration

Nissa Finney; Alan Marshall

Migration scholarship has recently paid attention to lifecourse and non‐economic effects of moving house. Yet consideration of the effects of internal migration in later life has been relatively neglected despite their implications for social and spatial inequalities. Thus we address two questions: how trajectories of wellbeing in later life vary for movers and non‐movers, and how the event of moving affects wellbeing. In both cases we distinguish between “voluntary” and “involuntary” movers. We use 10 years (2002–2012) of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) to analyse trends in wellbeing for age cohorts and to examine how wellbeing changes through the event of moving. The Control, Autonomy, Selfrealisation and Pleasure (CASP‐19) measure of wellbeing is used. We find that, after controls for demographic and socio‐economic characteristics, involuntary movers have lower levels of wellbeing than stayers or voluntary movers; and involuntary movers experience a stabilisation in the decline in wellbeing following migration which is not seen for voluntary movers. So, migration in later life is good for wellbeing, maintaining advantageous wellbeing trajectories for voluntary movers and improving wellbeing trajectories for involuntary movers. These findings imply a rich potential of ELSA and similar longitudinal datasets for examining residential mobility; the need for ageing inequalities studies to take more account of residential mobility; the need for internal migration scholarship to pay greater attention to reason for move; and for policy to consider the potentially beneficial effects of residential mobility in later life, particularly for those in adverse circumstances.


Regional Studies | 2018

Cities’ attraction and retention of graduates: a more-than-economic approach

Lena Imeraj; Didier Willaert; Nissa Finney; Sylvie Gadeyne

ABSTRACT In skilled migration research, the role of the study location in graduates’ residential behaviour remains unclear. This paper addresses this lacuna by examining the attractiveness and retention of higher education cities for local attendants in the period after study, using Belgium as an empirical case study. Drawing on a unique linkage of census and register data for 1991–2010, logistic and Cox regressions illustrate the relative success of smaller cities once individual, familial and contextual factors are considered. Location-specific characteristics beyond the economic are found to shape skilled migration towards the higher education localities, particularly in the short term.


Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies | 2018

How is the benefit of mixed social networks altered by neighbourhood deprivation for ethnic groups

Simon Peters; Nissa Finney; Dharmi Kapadia

ABSTRACT Previous research has shown that people who are in poverty live in deprived neighbourhoods. Ethnic minority groups are more likely than the White majority to be poor and live in such areas. The likelihood of being poor may be reduced by having access to mixed social networks. But, for those living in deprived neighbourhoods there may be neither opportunities nor resources to form and maintain social networks that are mixed in terms of their ethnic or geographic composition. This paper tests this contention, for ethnic groups in the UK. Specifically, we use the UK’s largest household survey to examine the relationship between deprivation and mixing by investigating the following research questions: (1) Does neighbourhood deprivation alter the influence of mixed social network on poverty status? and (2) Is the influence of neighbourhood deprivation and social networks on poverty status equivalent for all ethnic minority groups? Our results suggest that high neighbourhood deprivation tends to over-ride the positive associations of geographically mixed social networks. Moreover, while this result is strong for the White British majority, there is only weak evidence that it holds for ethnic minority groups. This may imply that resource constraints restrict social network benefits, particularly for ethnic minorities.


Urban Studies | 2017

Socio-spatial factors associated with ethnic inequalities in districts of England and Wales, 2001–2011:

Kitty Lymperopoulou; Nissa Finney

This paper explores the changing geography of ethnic inequality in England and Wales drawing on data from the 2001 and 2011 censuses. Specifically, we use the 2011 Office for National Statistics (ONS) area classification to examine how ethnic inequalities within local areas with different demographic and socio-economic characteristics have changed over time. Local ethnic inequalities are examined through a set of indicators which capture differences in housing, health, employment and education between ethnic minority groups and the White British in local authority districts in England and Wales. The results suggest that ethnic inequalities are widespread and persistent, and highlight the different ways in which inequalities manifest for particular ethnic groups in different localities. Ethnic inequality in housing and employment is severe for most ethnic minority groups, particularly in large urban areas that have been traditional settlement areas for ethnic minorities. However, inequalities increased most over the decade 2001–2011 in rural and coastal areas that have low ethnic diversity levels and small ethnic minority populations. The paper considers these findings in relation to theories of service provision and racism, ethnic density, and immigrant adaptation.


Archive | 2013

Population and Society

Clare Holdsworth; Nissa Finney; Alan Marshall; Paul Norman


Archive | 2015

How are poverty, ethnicity and social networks related?

Nissa Finney; Dharmi Kapadia; Simon Peters


Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies | 2018

Opportunities and challenges doing interdisciplinary research: what can we learn from studies of ethnicity, inequality and place?

Nissa Finney; Kenneth Clark; Jacques Yzet Nazroo


Archive | 2017

Who, where and what should be the focus of addressing deprivation and ethnic inequality to promote integration?

Kitty Lymperopoulou; Nissa Finney

Collaboration


Dive into the Nissa Finney's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bethan Harries

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alan Marshall

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dharmi Kapadia

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Simon Peters

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Didier Willaert

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lena Imeraj

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sylvie Gadeyne

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge