UK

Rural to urban drift
Within the UK, there is still a large movement of people from rural
to urban areas, as people seek better employment prospects.
Younger
people argue that there are no opportunities for them within rural
communities, and that they have no choice but to move to urban
areas. There also continues to be a North - South drift of population,
despite an expansion in all UK cities.
Ironically, some city dwellers
yearn for an ‘idealised’ rural lifestyle, and so buy
second homes there. This has increased property prices, making
it even harder for younger people to remain in rural areas. 
Impact on housing demands
As towns and cities increase this leads to greater demands for housing.
The ambition of many within the UK is to own their own house, ideally
with its own garden.
As a result, there is an ever increasing demand
for new homes to be built. This means that more of the surrounding ‘green
belt’ is built upon, thereby actually reducing the amount
of countryside left.
Government policies now promote building on
land formally used for other purposes (brown belt). Yet as new
properties are built, this seems to increase demand, with even
more people being attracted to an area! 
The asylum issue
The media in the UK has recently featured many stories about asylum
seekers and economic migrants.
Much of the reporting has been hostile,
with the tabloids in particular accusing many genuine asylum seekers
of being either terrorists, or simply economic migrants who are
coming to ‘sponge off the state’, by claiming social
welfare benefits.
Claims of the UK being ‘swamped’ with
bogus applicants have helped fuel a rise in xenophobia in some
areas of the country. Yet the real story is somewhat different.
According to UN statistics, Britain only takes 2% of the world’s
refugees or asylum seekers. 
A moral issue?
Many asylum seekers in the UK now face detention as their claims
are processed, with the threat of deportation hanging over them.
A recent government attempt to increase the number of detention
centres has met with resistance, not least from the inhabitants
of the areas surrounding the proposed new centres.
Unfortunately
their protests seem to focus on concerns about their own livelihoods,
rather than on the morality of detaining people when they have
committed no crime. An attempt to deny benefits to those who
do not immediately claim asylum when entering the country has been
defeated.
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