Ali, Y. (2012). Shariah and citizenship. California Law Review 100:1027
Ali (2012) focuses on the pernicious trend towards institutionalized Islamophobia and racism in America. Starting with the 2010 "Save Our State" amendment in Oklahoma, several states have adopted similar approaches that essentially legislate discrimination. According to the author, such legislation is not only based on mistruth and has no basis in fact or evidence; the legislation is overtly unconstitutional and deprives Muslim Americans of their legal rights and protections. Anti-Muslim legislation creates a "second class citizenship" class for Muslims. Moreover, Ali (2012) clarifies the nature and definition of Sharia law and shows that Sharia law has been grossly distorted by the media. What is frequently called "Sharia" is actually a set of personal religious obligations and practices, not the inhumane punishments sensationalized by the media. The author also provides policy recommendations.
This article is instrumental in a cogent discussion about the distortions made by the media regarding Islam, and Sharia law in particular. The article addresses issues related to institutionalized Islamophobia and the legal implications thereof, and is therefore a critical source in my research.
Anti-Defamation League: http://www.adl.org/
The Anti-Defamation League started as an organization devoted to rooting out anti-Semitism and has done a brilliant job with its public relations campaigns, public awareness campaigns, and influences in public policy related to hate crimes and discrimination. The same organization has since broached a wider subject area, targets a broader swath of hate crimes, and can therefore be a valuable source of information on how to inhibit the spread of Islamophobia in concerted ways.
Byers, B.D. & Jones, J.A. (2007). The impact of the terrorist attacks of 9/11 on hate crime. Journal of Ethnicity in Criminal Justice 5(1).
Using sociological methods, Byers & Jones (2007) analyze the FBI's UCR data to show that instances of hate crime directed at Muslims increased in the eight weeks following September 11 and rates remained relatively high thereafter too. The research showed that hate crimes against Muslims were conspicuously absent in the two cities directly hit by the terrorist attacks of September 11: New York and Washington, D.C. Rather than hypothesize that the lack of hate crimes in those cities was due to their being multicultural hubs, the authors suggest that in-group/out-group...
Islamophobia and the Media Islam is a minority religion in America, and many Americans have never had contact with Muslims. As a result, a substantial portion of the American population relies on the media for information about Islam and related topics like the Middle East. Since September 11, but arguably before that watershed event, the news media has built a platform of fear against terrorism but against Islam in particular. Although
Misconceptions About Sharia Law Much Islamophobia is grounded in misguided assumptions about Islam and particularly about Sharia law. According to Ali (2014), "nearly two dozen state legislatures" have proposed laws banning Sharia without developing even a modicum of understanding of what Sharia law is, and what it entails (Ali, 2014, p. 1027). Sharia law is central to Islam and to Muslim identity and practice, but only small fraction -- five percent
104).. Berlin district mayor, Neukolln, asserts that multiculturalism in German has fallen short. Evidence shows that the recent increment in immigration is because of economic refugees from southern European nations because of the euro disaster (Conradt 2013, p.117). However, the debate regarding the considerable rise in immigration in German falls back to the Turkish community integration, which depicts the uppermost number of foreigners in Germany, the Europe largest economy. Scores of
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