Scottish Demographic Maps (user search)
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Author Topic: Scottish Demographic Maps  (Read 8793 times)
bore
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« on: January 14, 2012, 04:02:55 PM »

Great map, very interesting to pour over and I hope you've got more.

Just a few questions, are the pinkish areas in fife ex mining and what's the green area there as well, an Edinburgh commuter village?

And could I see a close up of Edinburgh city?

Thanks
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bore
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« Reply #1 on: January 17, 2012, 03:55:42 PM »

Same for Jews, though I've included result from 50-100. Note that the figures for Edinburgh are in likelyhood exclusively students.



What's the reason for the high numbers in East Renfrewshire?Is it pre war from Eastern Europe or something completely different?
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bore
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« Reply #2 on: January 17, 2012, 04:47:05 PM »

What's the reason for the high numbers in East Renfrewshire?Is it pre war from Eastern Europe or something completely different?

Money. If you have wealth you moved out of Glasgow, where Scotland's Jewish community was based to suburbia. It was a move that took place post war and you can see that well to do Muslims did the same.

Now for the interesting part. Clarkston and Stamperland, the two white dots in the sea of blue seem to be 'devoid' of the large Jewish/Muslim community elsewhere. These are interwar estates, very similar to Bearsden to the north of Glasgow where again there isn't a big minority presence despite being absurdly middle class. This is because A. the owners/sellers of these estates didn't sell them to anyone who wasn't high church Protestant and B. They pre-date the Muslim immigration wave and pre-date the destruction of the Gorbals, at once the hub of Jewish Glasgow.

Thanks, thats really interesting.
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bore
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« Reply #3 on: October 06, 2012, 02:18:42 PM »

Sorry about the bump here, but I think this is the appropriate thread.

Anyway, I'm not sure if this has been posted before (if so I apologise) but I've just found this great blog which has an interactive map of scottish deprivation here: http://undertheraedar.blogspot.co.uk/2011/04/scottish-index-of-multiple-deprivation.html

If anyone's interested I think the websites also got an english and welsh version as well as other maps.
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bore
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« Reply #4 on: December 04, 2012, 11:18:53 AM »

Great work Smiley, I'd also be very interested in seeing an Edinburgh catholic shade map. Particularly surprising to me in that map is Leith, which I'd have expected to be much more culturally catholic than other areas for obvious reasons.

Perhaps a reason for the high none in Liberton/Gilmerton and sighthill is the lack of anything to bind them to the church of Scotland in the way there is in Glasgow. Maybe Glasgow is more the anomaly here than Edinburgh?
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« Reply #5 on: December 06, 2012, 11:41:33 AM »

Great work Smiley, I'd also be very interested in seeing an Edinburgh catholic shade map. Particularly surprising to me in that map is Leith, which I'd have expected to be much more culturally catholic than other areas for obvious reasons.

Perhaps a reason for the high none in Liberton/Gilmerton and sighthill is the lack of anything to bind them to the church of Scotland in the way there is in Glasgow. Maybe Glasgow is more the anomaly here than Edinburgh?

What's unfortunate is that this information has only been released for the 2001 census. As such we've never really been able to follow trends. Catholic's account for over 70% in places like Barra, Vatersay, Eriskay etc which is the oldest concentration in the country. They are over 50% in places like Coatbridge Kirkshaws, Croy, Old Monkland and over 40% in Greenock, Blantyre, Uddingston, Chapelhall and parts of Dumbarton.

As for Edinburgh, any pattern that would have existed has dissapated. They make up 11% in leafy Meadowbank for example but only 12% in Leith Links. Their best showing in Edinburgh is Restalrig at 16.45%, so their isn't much of a stark divide. What may have happened of course is that their population was dispersed post-war. Looking at Glenrothes they form less than 10%. Looking at Livingston, they make up less than 15%; less than places like Blackburn and Fauldhouse. Perhaps they were never that strong to begin with?

So ignoring the southerly Outer Hebrides its basically a map of where the catholic irish settled, and its very interesting that these patterns have continued for 150 years, although it makes it all the more surprising that there doesn't seem to be a pattern in Edinburgh. Apparently Edinburgh was 6.5% Irish born in 1851, although they did congregate in specific areas like the cowgate ( Hibs were formed out of St Patrick's church in the area by a canon Hannan) and leith. Obviously Edinburgh was never like Glasgow, but it did still have a reasonably large number, perhaps the answer is done to post war resettlement, and gentrification in areas like the cowgate, although restalrig IIRC was where many leithers were resettled. Out of interest, what's the lowest catholic percentage?
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