Kenyan migration to the United Kingdom

Kenyan migration to the United Kingdom has been occurring for many decades. As a result, many people in the UK were born in Kenya, or have Kenyan ancestry. Many Kenyan people who migrated to the UK are of South Asian extraction.

Kenyan Britons
Total population
Kenyan-born residents
129,633 (2001 census)
140,536 (2011 census)
121,000 (2019 ONS estimate)
Regions with significant populations
London, South East England, East Midlands
Languages
English (British, Kenyan), Swahili, Indian Languages
Religion
Christianity, Sikhism, Islam, Hinduism

Background

Most Kenyans in the UK are ethnically South Asian Kenyans who, like those in Uganda, were expelled during the late 1960s and early 1970s.[1] This community has a substantial cluster in Leicester and London.[1] The most recent growth may now be coming from ethnically black African Kenyans, mirroring wider trends across the continent of economic migration to the richer industrialised nations.[1] There are also a small number of Kenyan-born people who are the children of British civil servants based there before the end of the Empire.[1]

Demographics

The 2001 UK Census recorded 129,633 Kenyan-born British residents.[2] The 2011 census recorded 135,966 Kenyan-born people resident in England, 1,526 in Wales,[3] 2,743 in Scotland[4] and 301 in Northern Ireland,[5] making a UK total of 140,536. The equivalent UK figure in 2019 has been estimated at 121,000 by the Office for National Statistics.[6]

The largest proportion of Kenyan-born British residents are found in the capital, London, where around half of the Kenyan-born population in Britain resides. There are also significant populations in the South East and the East Midlands.[7]

Famous Britons born in Kenya

Academia, medicine and science

Business, law and politics

Music and the arts

Sport

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.