| Mobility of Population
As well as an established permanently resident population,
the Borough has a substantial temporary population.
in addition to people who work for embassies or multi-national
firms based in or near the Borough there are many people
who come to the area because of the large number of
cheap hotels and privately rented lodgings. Many of
these people are on low incomes, are students or are
working in service industries.
A highly mobile population creates specific demands
on housing and social services as many people do not
have the support of family or friends living close to
them. Areas with the highest turnover of population,
such as Earls Court, have a high incidence of mental
health problems, substance misuse and suicide.
Ethnic minority population
There are an estimated ninety seven different ethnic
communities in the Borough. The 1991 census shows that
Kensington and Chelsea the smallest ethnic minority
population of all the Inner London Boroughs at 16%,
although in parts of the north of the Borough thirty
five percent are from ethnic groups.
As well as an established Afro-Caribbean community
there are significant Moroccan, Spanish, Portugese and
Filipino communities and a number of Central Europeans,
mostly elderly, who arrived during the 1940s. More recently,
people from Africa and the Middle East have moved to
Kensington and Chelsea, often as refugees from war or
political repression.
After English, the five main languages spoken in the
Borough are Spanish, Portugese, Arabic, Bengali and
Tagalog. At least ninety two other languages are also
spoken and thirty seven percent of pupils in the Borough's
schools have English as a second language.
Unemployment
Total unemployment in the Borough (11%) is the lowest
in Inner London but has risen sharply in line with the
pattern throughout the city. However, Borough-wide figures
obscure differences between areas. Over a third of the
unemployed are concentrated within five wards in the
North of the Borough where the level of male unemployment
reaches twenty nine percent. The unemployment level
in the North of the Borough in July 1992 was eighteen
percent. In the North Kensington City Challenge wards,
the total level of unemployment was twenty percent.
These wards contain thirty six percent of the Borough's
unemployed people. Over half of all those unemployed
have been out of work for more than six months.
Areas of Deprivation
Levels of deprivation which indicate a need for high
levels of social services, health care and housing provision
have been identified using a series of measures of deprivation
applied to each ward. At present the Jarman index is
based on the 1981 census and has yet to be recalculated
using the data from the 1991 census. These Underprivileged
Area (UPA) scores, devised by Jarman in 1994, link together
a number of factors such as age, single households,
unemployment levels, mobility and ethnicity. Taking
account of these factors, eight wards have high levels
of deprivation Golborne, Colville, St Charles, Avondale
and Kelfield in the North of the Borough, Earls Court
in the centre and
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