• Home
  • News
  • World
  • Politics
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Tech
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
What's On

Man City pay classy tribute to Ricky Hatton as members of boxing legend’s family attend Etihad

27 September 2025

Dancing With The Stars’ Robert Irwin’s relationship admission leaves fans stunned

27 September 2025

Insurance experts warn drivers not to do this one thing after an accident

27 September 2025

‘Horrifying issue with my teeth made me look like Family Guy’s Quagmire’

27 September 2025

Brit woman caged in Iran hellhole prison on ‘spy charges’ is ‘placed on a drip’

27 September 2025

MIKEY SMITH: 8 unhinged Donald Trump moments as he agrees to release unexpected classified files

27 September 2025

What is loaded water? New health trend that ‘promises’ weight loss and to curb cravings

27 September 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Man City pay classy tribute to Ricky Hatton as members of boxing legend’s family attend Etihad
  • Dancing With The Stars’ Robert Irwin’s relationship admission leaves fans stunned
  • Insurance experts warn drivers not to do this one thing after an accident
  • ‘Horrifying issue with my teeth made me look like Family Guy’s Quagmire’
  • Brit woman caged in Iran hellhole prison on ‘spy charges’ is ‘placed on a drip’
  • MIKEY SMITH: 8 unhinged Donald Trump moments as he agrees to release unexpected classified files
  • What is loaded water? New health trend that ‘promises’ weight loss and to curb cravings
  • ‘I opened Joma Jewellery’s 6-day advent calendar – it feels like Christmas has come early’
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
England TimesEngland Times
Demo
  • Home
  • News
  • World
  • Politics
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Tech
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
England TimesEngland Times
Home » ‘Hair discrimination makes kids as young as 10 feel isolated – it’s time for change’
Lifestyle

‘Hair discrimination makes kids as young as 10 feel isolated – it’s time for change’

By staff27 September 2025No Comments4 Mins Read

Internalised hair bias can begin long before any act of discrimination. Sometimes, it starts in silence, like with 10-year-old Nevaeh, who hides her afro because she feels it’s “too much”

From the classroom to offices and even on TV, Afro hair is often underrepresented – or worse, policed. Whether it’s being referred to as ‘unprofessional’ or ‘messy’, the message to change your hair to suit eurocentric beauty standards is often internalised from a young age.

The University of Cambridge found that 98% of Black Britons said they felt compelled to compromise who they were in the workplace, including their hairstyle and 93% of Black people in the UK have faced an negative comment about their afro hair.

Unfortunately, 10 year old Nevaeh has internalised this bias against Afro hair. She prefers to hide her Afro in a bun and when she compares it to her sister’s looser curls, she’d trade it in a heartbeat.

“I don’t really like to wear my hair out” Nevaeh told the Mirror, “its too big, too puffy. When it’s straight, I feel more confident.”

READ MORE: ‘I make £10K a month from my phone – I feel like I’ve ‘cheated’ the system’READ MORE: Water peace lilies with one cup of common food makes them ‘explode with flowers’

Just 17% of children books published in the UK featured a non-white character and only 7% had those as main characters, reports A Centre For Literacy in Primary Education (CLPE) That invisibility feeds into a deeper message – that your race, hair or identity doesn’t belong at the centre, it’s no wonder they start to shrink themselves – even before anyone tells them to.

Zina Alfa, 32, had a similar experience to Nevaeh. The lack of representation of people who had hair like her, and the internalised shame from negative experiences around her hair pushed her to launch a petition to ban hair discrimination in the UK.

“I remember watching adverts and not seeing anyone who looked like me, even down to the dolls I had growing up – they all had straight hair, I started to believe that’s what pretty is,” she told the Mirror.

“If all you ever see on TV is girls with straight hair getting praised, it’s hard not to internalise that,” she said. “We act like children don’t know these things, but they do, and it shapes them before we even realise what’s happening.”

Zina is determined to protect future generations of children with Afro hair with her petition. The petition has now gained over 97,000 verified signatures calling for hair discrimination to be taken seriously – and explicitly banned in the 2010 Equality act.

The University of Reading and TRIYBE, a forward thinking organisation explains how Afro hair discrimination can impact mental health and therefore, urgently needs recognition in academic, healthcare and community spaces.

For more stories like this subscribe to our weekly newsletter, The Weekly Gulp, for a curated roundup of trending stories, poignant interviews, and viral lifestyle picks from The Mirror’s Audience U35 team delivered straight to your inbox.

“As a young Black heritage male, it’s become clear to me that the impact of hair-based experiences is particularly pronounced in spaces where Black heritage individuals are underrepresented, such as many UK universities and professional spaces,” community research at TRIYBE Tyler said. “In these environments, both students and staff often feel isolated or misunderstood when it comes to their experiences with hair.”

These experiences show that the toll of hair bias isn’t always loud or obvious. Often, it builds quietly, chipping away at confidence until culture itself begins to feel like a burden, long before a person even knows the name for it.

That’s why World Afro Day exists: a global day of celebration and liberation for Afro hair. By partnering with organisations and creating events, tools, and training, it empowers people with Afro hair while equipping everyone to be part of the change, helping children like Nevaeh grow up feeling proud, not pressured.

Help us improve our content by completing the survey below. We’d love to hear from you!

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email

Related News

Insurance experts warn drivers not to do this one thing after an accident

27 September 2025

‘I noticed a small change in my baby’s behaviour, just hours later he was dead’

27 September 2025

New Banksy emerges 10 years on from his most controversial exhibition to date

27 September 2025

Majority of young girls are adapting their behaviour to keep themselves safe in the UK

27 September 2025

‘I bought £4 Too Good To Go bag from Morrisons but contents left me fuming’

27 September 2025

Keep spiders out of your home forever with these 5 tips

27 September 2025
Latest News

Dancing With The Stars’ Robert Irwin’s relationship admission leaves fans stunned

27 September 2025

Insurance experts warn drivers not to do this one thing after an accident

27 September 2025

‘Horrifying issue with my teeth made me look like Family Guy’s Quagmire’

27 September 2025

Brit woman caged in Iran hellhole prison on ‘spy charges’ is ‘placed on a drip’

27 September 2025
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss
Politics

MIKEY SMITH: 8 unhinged Donald Trump moments as he agrees to release unexpected classified files

By staff27 September 20250

Donald Trump’s weird week started with bad medical advice, a deranged speech to the UN…

What is loaded water? New health trend that ‘promises’ weight loss and to curb cravings

27 September 2025

‘I opened Joma Jewellery’s 6-day advent calendar – it feels like Christmas has come early’

27 September 2025

Arsenal summer signing linked with shock transfer exit after only one game

27 September 2025
England Times
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
© 2025 England Times. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version