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E-raamat: Routledge International Handbook of Islamophobia

Edited by (Birmingham City University, UK), Edited by (Nottingham Trent University, UK)
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Islamophobic hate crimes have increased significantly following the terrorist attacks of 9/11 and 7/7. More recently, the rhetoric surrounding Trump’s election and presidency, Brexit, the rise of far-right groups and ISIS-inspired terrorist attacks worldwide have promoted a climate where Islamophobia and anti-Muslim sentiments have become ‘legitimised’. The Routledge International Handbook of Islamophobia provides a comprehensive single-volume collection of key readings in Islamophobia. Consisting of 32 chapters accessibly written by scholars, policy makers and practitioners, it seeks to examine the nature, extent, implications of, and responses to Islamophobic hate crime both nationally and internationally.This volume will appeal to undergraduate and postgraduate students as well as postdoctoral researchers interested in fields such as Criminology, Victimology, Sociology, Social Policy, Religious Studies, Law and related Social Sciences subjects. It will also appeal to scholars, policy makers and practitioners working in and around the areas of Islamophobic hate crimes.
Notes on contributors ix
Introduction 1(8)
Irene Zempi
Imran Atvan
PART I Conceptualising Islamophobia
9(88)
1 The debate over the utility and precision of the term "Islamophobia"
11(7)
Nathan C. Lean
2 Islamophobia as the racialisation of Muslims
18(14)
Nasar Mcer
Tariq Modood
3 Islamophobia as the hidden hand of structural and cultural racism
32(10)
Tahir Abbas
4 A multidimensional model of understanding Islamophobia: a comparative practical analysis of the US, Canada, UK and France
42(16)
Saied Reza Ameli
Arztt Merali
5 Mapping and mainstreaming Islamophobia: between the illiberal and liberal
58(13)
Aurelien Mondon
Aaron Winter
6 The psychology of hate crime offenders who target Muslims: who could be a hate crime offender?
71(13)
Jane Prince
7 `Your pain is my pain': examining the community impacts of Islamophobic hate crimes
84(13)
Jenny L. Puferson
Mark A. Walters
Rupert Brown
PART II Patterns of Islamophobia through a European lens
97(140)
8 A historical perspective: secularism, `white backlash' and Islamophobia in France
99(11)
Olivier Esteves
9 Islamophobia and the Left in France
110(13)
Timothy Peace
10 The gendered dimension of Islamophobia in Belgium
123(12)
Amina Easat-Daas
11 Islamophobia in Ireland: challenges from below?
135(12)
James Can
12 The racialised and Islamophobic framing of the Rotherham and Rochdale child sexual abuse scandals
147(14)
Waqas Tufail
13 Discrimination against Muslims in Scotland
161(14)
Stefano Bonino
14 Islamophobia and the Muslim student: disciplining the intellect
175(13)
Tania Saeed
15 Islamophobia in UK universities
188(10)
Hareem Ghahi
Ilyas Nagdee
16 Islamophobia in Greece: the `Muslim threat' and the panic about Islam
198(14)
Alexandros Sakellariou
17 Religious dimension of Polish fears of Muslims and Islam
212(13)
Konrad Pedziwiatr
18 Islamophobia and the quest for European identity in Poland
225(12)
Katarzyna Gorak-Sosnowska
Marta Pachocka
PART III Patterns of Islamophobia through a global lens
237(74)
19 Islamophobia and the US ideological infrastructure of white supremacy
239(13)
Louise Gainkar
20 Muslim American youth and post-9/11 Islamophobia: Interfaith activism and the limits of religious multiculturalism
252(11)
Sunaina Maira
21 Diasporas and dystopias on the beach: Burkini wars in France and Australia
263(12)
Shakira Hussein
Scheherazade Bloul
Scott Poynting
22 Breaking the peace: the Quebec City terrorist attack
275(11)
Barbara Perry
23 Understanding Islamophobia in Southeast Asia
286(12)
Mohamed Nawab Mohamed Osrnan
24 Islamophobia in US education
298(13)
Shahana Mir
Loukia K. Sarroub
PART IV Responding to Islamophobia
311(97)
25 Micro-level management of Islamophobia: negotiation, deflection and resistance
313(12)
Fatinia Khan
Gabe Mythen
26 Race, racism, Islamophobia in the media: journalists' perceptions and Muslim responses
325(15)
Amir Saeed
27 Flying while Muslim: should we be concerned about Islamophobia at the airport?
340(12)
Leda Blackwood
28 Far-right Islamophobia: from ideology to `mainstreamed' hate crimes
352(11)
Matthew Feldman
Paul Stacker
29 Islamophobia and the radical right in Europe: nostalgia or alternative Utopia?
363(11)
Aristotle Kallis
30 Terrorism, hate speech and `cumulative extremism' on Facebook: a case study
374(11)
Mark Littler
Kathy Kondor
31 The police challenges in responding to Islamophobic hate crime
385(12)
Paul Giannasi
32 Governmental responses to Islamophobia in the UK: a two-decade retrospective
397(11)
Chris Allen
Index 408
Irene Zempi is a Lecturer in Criminology at Nottingham Trent University, UK.

Imran Awan is a Professor in Criminology and Deputy Director of the Centre for Applied Criminology at Birmingham City University, UK.