
pages 451-475
Available online: 15 Jun 2009This paper looks at changing patterns of residence for South Asians (Pakistani, Indian, Bangladeshi and other South Asians as represented in the census) in Greater Glasgow, as well as considering what South Asians' motivations for choice of residential location are, and how these relate to issues of personal identity. Providing a single account for the city of Glasgow proves difficult, since there are big differences in experience between traditional areas of settlement and suburbs north of the city centre, compared with those in the south of the city. Whilst the study finds evidence of greater residential mixing by South Asians within the city (contrary to the self-segregation claim), there are also indications that these are somewhat ‘bounded choices’ made by people trying to balance competing identities and cultural claims and aspirations, and not simply a desire to ‘mix’. Equally, one must be careful to interpret suburbanisation as a particular form of ‘integration’ founded on a normality that involves greater privatism and socio-economic aspirations and little expectation of social interaction with white neighbours.