Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Evidence Base for London
공공데이터포털
The Mayor has a role to play in leading, shaping and responding to changes in London through the work of the GLA group. Inclusive London: the Mayor's equality, diversity and inclusion strategy sets out how he will help address the inequalities, barriers and discrimination experienced by groups protected by the Equality Act 2010, as well as wider issues. These include poverty and socio-economic inequality, and the challenges and disadvantage facing groups like young people in care, care leavers, single parents, migrants and refugees. This report, the equality, diversity and inclusion evidence base for London, informs the strategy. It presents evidence on London's diverse population, as well as the inequalities experienced by Londoners in areas such as housing, education, employment, transport, crime, health, social integration, culture and sport.
Social Integration Headline Measures
공공데이터포털
The Mayor is committed to measuring social integration in London. Providing evidence-based analysis of the state of social integration will allow him to shine a light on the whole city. Accompanying the Social Integration Strategy published in March 2018, the Mayor published a set of measures tracking social integration in London. These measures were selected from existing high-quality datasets, such as large-scale central government surveys, research council surveys, and administrative data. City Hall picked these 18 measures to cover the three main parts of social integration (relationships, participation and equality), choosing measures which are robust over time. The social integration measures were updated in June 2019, following the publication of the headline findings of the Survey of Londoners. The Survey of Londoners has provided much needed extra evidence on the state of social integration in London. Consequently, the initial list of 18 measures has been revised and expanded on, so that there are now 30 measures of social integration in London.
Elis Mutlu - CLEVER Cities Community Researchers Baseline Report, 2021
공공데이터포털
CLEVER Cities in South Thamesmead is a partnership between the Mayor of London, Peabody, Groundwork London, Young Foundation and Social Finance. The project is supported by The Social Innovation Partnership and its Community Research Programme. The Community Research Team spent November and December 2020 gathering data from local people about their experiences in Thamesmead over the last year. The team hosted 9 focus groups with 101 attendees across the sessions, reaching 50 individual residents. They conducted 1:1 interviews with 39 residents (44% of whom were from South Thamesmead). Topics relevant to South Thamesmead discussed in the focus groups included: Accessibility of arts and culture Crime and safety Perception of regeneration – Peabody residents Perception of regeneration – wider Thamesmead residents South Thamesmead Estate Opportunities for young people
Greater London Authority - Annual London Survey 2014
공공데이터포털
In November 2014, 3,674 Londoners took part in the first London Survey run by Talk London, to tell us what they thought of the city and their neighbourhood. The London Survey enables us to: • Assess Londoners’ priorities across the breadth of Mayoral responsibilities • Understand Londoners’ perceptions of their quality of life • Identify those areas that require improvement, or where we need to improve outcomes for particular groups of people. TECHNICAL DETAILS • Results are based on interviews with 3,674 London residents aged 18+. • Interviews were carried out online via the Talk London community between 3 Oct and 5 Nov. • Interviews were not randomly sampled, but self-selecting via a number of known databases. This achieved a non-representative sample of Londoners. • The data has been weighted by age, gender and ethnicity to reflect that of the London population. • A minimum number of responses were achieved for each key demographic group to maintain a robust sample. • Where results do not sum to 100% this may be due to multiple responses, computer rounding or the exclusion of don’t knows/not stated. • The qualitative analysis of the open-ended questions 36, 37 and 38 was undertaken by SPA Future Thinking. Top level themes and sub themes are reported as a percentage of the overall base number of respondents (3,421 to all three questions). The top three sub themes are presented where available. • This is the first London Survey conducted by Talk London for City Hall. INFOGRAPHICS
Greater London Authority - Annual London Survey 2010
공공데이터포털
The data is taken from a face-to-face survey of 1,490 residents of Greater London, undertaken in early 2010 by BMG Research on behalf of the GLA. The questions explore areas of Mayoral policy and priority including policing and safety, the environment, transport, the Olympics and london life. The data is available by demographic group, including gender, age, ethnicity and social class. A full report and a summary of topline results were published on the GLA website in May 2010. The response data is available as a CSV file containing 403 variables with an accompanying file defining each variable. The same data is also available in SPSS format for users of that software. The data is also available in an Excel spreadsheet with tabs relating to each of the categories in the main report. This gets around the Excel limit of 255 columns in a single worksheet. A crosstab report is also available in rtf format.