European states and their Muslim citizens: The impact of institutions on perceptions and boundaries

In the context of Islamophobia, a word which goes viral after the September 11 tragedy, this book adds another scholarly work on how Muslims fared in the twentieth century Europe. The buzz word indicating anti-Islam rhetoric has become contagious particularly after the Runnymede Trust Report (...

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Main Author: Harun, Minah
Other Authors: J. R., Bowen
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: UUM Press 2014
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Online Access:http://repo.uum.edu.my/27839/1/MMJ%2018%202014%2093%2095.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/27839/
http://mmj.uum.edu.my/index.php/previous-issues/141-malaysian-management-journal-mmj-vol-18-2014
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spelling my.uum.repo.278392020-11-08T01:13:11Z http://repo.uum.edu.my/27839/ European states and their Muslim citizens: The impact of institutions on perceptions and boundaries Harun, Minah HD28 Management. Industrial Management In the context of Islamophobia, a word which goes viral after the September 11 tragedy, this book adds another scholarly work on how Muslims fared in the twentieth century Europe. The buzz word indicating anti-Islam rhetoric has become contagious particularly after the Runnymede Trust Report (1997) which resulted in many Muslims fearing for their lives. Post September 11 popularises such rhetoric. For various reasons, religion and race have indeed been the targets in this challenging civilised world. The book is timely given the current scenario where one will encounter readings which tend to portray a rather bias perspective on Muslims; Muslims as the group to be avoided, or the group with extreme religious fundamentalism. The stigmatised Muslim—to borrow Goffman’s term—has become a narrative of today’s world, in particular, the social media where the public is frequently exposed to such (negative) debates about Muslims and on being Muslims. As the editors rightly point out, “[a]cross Western Europe, public discourse has been suffused by claims about Muslims and Islam. These claims are negative” (p. 1). UUM Press J. R., Bowen C., Bertossi J. W., Duyvendak M. L., Krook 2014 Book PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://repo.uum.edu.my/27839/1/MMJ%2018%202014%2093%2095.pdf Harun, Minah (2014) European states and their Muslim citizens: The impact of institutions on perceptions and boundaries. UUM Press, Malaysian Management Journal. ISBN 978-1-107-03864-6 http://mmj.uum.edu.my/index.php/previous-issues/141-malaysian-management-journal-mmj-vol-18-2014
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
building UUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Utara Malaysia
content_source UUM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://repo.uum.edu.my/
language English
topic HD28 Management. Industrial Management
spellingShingle HD28 Management. Industrial Management
Harun, Minah
European states and their Muslim citizens: The impact of institutions on perceptions and boundaries
description In the context of Islamophobia, a word which goes viral after the September 11 tragedy, this book adds another scholarly work on how Muslims fared in the twentieth century Europe. The buzz word indicating anti-Islam rhetoric has become contagious particularly after the Runnymede Trust Report (1997) which resulted in many Muslims fearing for their lives. Post September 11 popularises such rhetoric. For various reasons, religion and race have indeed been the targets in this challenging civilised world. The book is timely given the current scenario where one will encounter readings which tend to portray a rather bias perspective on Muslims; Muslims as the group to be avoided, or the group with extreme religious fundamentalism. The stigmatised Muslim—to borrow Goffman’s term—has become a narrative of today’s world, in particular, the social media where the public is frequently exposed to such (negative) debates about Muslims and on being Muslims. As the editors rightly point out, “[a]cross Western Europe, public discourse has been suffused by claims about Muslims and Islam. These claims are negative” (p. 1).
author2 J. R., Bowen
author_facet J. R., Bowen
Harun, Minah
format Book
author Harun, Minah
author_sort Harun, Minah
title European states and their Muslim citizens: The impact of institutions on perceptions and boundaries
title_short European states and their Muslim citizens: The impact of institutions on perceptions and boundaries
title_full European states and their Muslim citizens: The impact of institutions on perceptions and boundaries
title_fullStr European states and their Muslim citizens: The impact of institutions on perceptions and boundaries
title_full_unstemmed European states and their Muslim citizens: The impact of institutions on perceptions and boundaries
title_sort european states and their muslim citizens: the impact of institutions on perceptions and boundaries
publisher UUM Press
publishDate 2014
url http://repo.uum.edu.my/27839/1/MMJ%2018%202014%2093%2095.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/27839/
http://mmj.uum.edu.my/index.php/previous-issues/141-malaysian-management-journal-mmj-vol-18-2014
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score 13.209306