Table of Contents
Volume I. MIGRATION AND DIASPORA
Part 1. History
1. Nabil Matar (2009) Britons and Muslims in the early modern period: from prejudice to (a theory of) toleration, Patterns of Prejudice 43(3-4): 213-231,
2. Nielsen, Jorgen S. (1987) ‘Muslims in Europe’, Renaissance and Modern Studies 31(1): 58-73.
3. Vivek Bald (2006) ‘Overlapping Diasporas, Multiracial Lives: South Asian Muslims in U.S. Communities of Color, 1880–1950’, Souls 8(4): 3-18.
4. Talip Küçükcan (2004) The making of Turkish‐Muslim diaspora in Britain: religious collective identity in a multicultural public sphere, Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 24(2): 243-258.
Part 2. Post-war migration and settlement
5. Ceri Peach & Günther Glebe (1995) Muslim minorities in Western Europe, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 18:1, 26-45.
6. Fetzer, Joel S and Soper, Christopher J (2005) Muslims and the State in Britain, France and Germany, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, chapter 1: Explaining the accommodation of Muslim religious practices in Western Europe.
7. Cesari, Jocelyne (2004) When Islam and Democracy Meet: Muslims in Europe and in the United States, chapter 4: The Secularisation of Islamic Institutions in Europe and the United States: Two Approaches, Basingstoke: Palgrave-Macmillan.
8. Amiraux, Valerie (2005) ‘Discrimination and Claims for Equal Rights Amongst Muslims in Europe’, in J Cesari and S McLoughlin (eds.) European Muslims and the Secular State. London: Ashgate, pp. 25-38.
Part 3. Integration and community
9. Anwar, Muhammad (2008) ‘Muslims in Western States: The British Experience and the Way Forward’, Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 28(1): 125-137.
10. Schumann, Christoph (2007) ‘A Muslim ‘Diaspora’ in the United States?’, The Muslim World 97(1): 11-32.
11. Norris, Pippa and Inglehart, Ronald F (2012) ‘Muslim Integration into Western Cultures: Between Origins and Destinations’, Political Studies 60(2): 228-251.
12. Ramadan, Tariq (2002) ‘Islam and Muslims in Europe: A Silent Revolution towards Rediscovery’, in Haddad, YH (ed.) Muslims in the West: From Sojourners to Citizens, New York: Oxford University Press, chapter 10, pp.158-167.
Part 4. Space and place
13. Silverstein, Paul A (2005) ‘Immigrant Racialization and the New Savage Slot: Race, Migration, and Immigration in the New Europe’, Annual Review of Anthropology 34: 363-384.
14. Ahmed, Akbar S and Hastings Donnan (1994) ‘Islam in the age of postmodernity’, in AS Ahmed and H Donnan (eds.) Islam, Globalisation and Postmodernity, Basingstoke: Routledge, chapter 1, pp. 1-20. (Just before the listing of following chapters)
15. Phillips, D (2006) ‘Parallel lives? Challenging discourses of British Muslim self-segregation, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 24 25–40
16. Hopkins, Peter E (2007) ‘Young people, masculinities, religion and race: new social geographies’, Progress in Human Geography 31(2): 163-177.
Volume II. CULTURAL AND SPATIAL IDENTITIES
Part 5. Inter-generational change
17. Amir Moazami, Schirin and Salvatore, Armando (2003) ‘Gender, Generation, and the Reform of Tradition: From Muslim majority societies to Western Europe’, in S Allievi and JS Nielsen (eds.) Muslim Networks and Transnational Communities in and across Europe, Leiden: Brill.
18. Voas, David and Fleischmann, Fenella (2012) ‘Islam Moves West: Religious Change in the First and Second Generations’, Annual Review of Sociology 38: 525-545.
19. Jacob, Konstanze and Kalter, Frank (2013) ‘Intergenerational Change in Religious Salience Among Immigrant Families in Four European Countries’, International Migration, 51(3): 38-56.
20. Fleischmann, Fenella and Phalet, Karen (2012) ‘Integration and religiosity among the Turkish second generation in Europe: a comparative analysis across four capital cities’, Ethnic and Racial Studies 35(2): 320-341.
Part 6. Multicultural integration
21. Gest, Justin (2012) ‘Western Muslim Integration’, Review of Middle East Studies 46(2): 190-199. (until trajectories for future research)
22. Jopkke, Christian (1996) ‘Multiculturalism and immigration: A comparison of the United States, Germany, and Great Britain’, Theory and Society 25(4): 449-500.
23. Savage, Timothy M (2004) ‘Europe and Islam: Crescent waxing, cultures clashing’, The Washington Quarterly 27(3): 25-50.
24. Meer, Nasar and Modood, Tariq (2009) ‘The Multicultural State We’re In: Muslims, "Multiculture" and the "Civic Re-balancing" of British Multiculturalism’, Political Studies 57(3): 473-497.
Part 7. Hyper-masculinity and Islamic feminism
25. Mac an Ghaill, Mairtin and Haywood, Chris (2015) ‘British-Born Pakistani and Bangladeshi Young Men: Exploring Unstable Concepts of Muslim, Islamophobia and Racialization’, Critical Sociology 41(1): 197-114.
26. Mirza, Heidi S (2013) ‘ ‘A second skin’ : Embodied intersectionality, transnationalism and narratives of identity and belonging among Muslim women in Britain’, Women’s Studies International Forum 36: 5-15.
27. Seedat, F. (2013) ‘Islam, feminism, and Islamic feminism: Between inadequacy and inevitability’, Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion, 29(2): 25-45.
28. Lorber, Judith (2002) ‘Heroes, Warriors, and "Burqas": A Feminist Sociologist's Reflections on September 11’, Sociological Forum 17(3): 377-396.
Part 8. Sufism in Europe
29. Geaves, Ron R. (1996) ‘Cult, charisma, community: the arrival of Sufi Pirs and their impact on Muslims in Britain’, Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 16(2): 169-192.
30. Ballard, R. (2006) ‘popular Islam in northern Pakistan and its reconstruction for in Urban Britain’, in Sufism in the West, edited by Jamal Malik and John Hinnells, London and New York: Routledge.
31. Howell, J and , M van Bruinessen (2007) Sufism and the ‘Modern in Islam’, in M van Bruinessen and J Howell (eds.) Sufism and the ‘Modern’ in Islam, London: IBTauris (just before reconceptualising Sufi engagements with modernity).
32. Schönbeck, Oluf (2009) Sufism in the USA: Creolisation, Hybridisation, Syncretisation’, in C Raudvere and L Stenberg (eds.) Sufism Today: Heritage and Tradition in the Global Community, London: IB Tauris.
Volume III. CITIZENSHIP AND POLITICAL IDENTITY
Part 9. Equality under the law
33. Modood, Tariq (2004) ‘Muslims and the Politics of Difference’, The Political Quarterly 74(1):100-115.
34. Grillo, Ralph (2007) ‘An excess of alterity? Debating difference in a multicultural society’, Ethnic and Racial Studies 30(6): 979-998.
35. Gill, Aisha (2004) ‘Voicing the Silent Fear: South Asian Women’s Experiences of Domestic Violence’, The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice 43(5): 465-483.
36. Shah, Prakash A. (2013) ‘In pursuit of the pagans: Muslim law in the English context’, The Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law 45(1): 58-75.
Part 10. The public space
37. Brubaker, Rogers (2013) ‘Categories of analysis and categories of practice: a note on the study of Muslims in European countries of immigration’, Ethnic and Racial Studies 36(1): 1-8.
38. Bowen, John R. (2004) ‘Beyond Migration: Islam as a Transnational Public Space’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 30(5): 879-894.
39. Gole, Nilufer (2011) ‘The public visibility of Islam and European politics of resentment: The minarets–mosques debate’, Philosophy and Social Criticism 37(4): 383–392.
40. Vertovec, Steven (2007) Super-diversity and its implications, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 30:6, 1024-1054
Part 11. Political participation
41. Sinno, Abdulkader H. (2012) ‘The Politics of Western Muslims’, Review of Middle East Studies 46(2): 216-231.
42. Warner, Carolyn M. and Wenner, Manfred W. (2006) ‘Religion and the Political Organization of Muslims in Europe’, Perspectives on Politics 1(3): 457-479.
43. Ayers, John W. and Hofstetter, C. Richard (2008) ‘American Muslim Political Participation Following 9/11: Religious Belief, Political Resources, Social Structures, and Political Awareness’, Politics and Religion 1(1): 3-26.
44. Peace, Timothy (2013) ‘Muslims and electoral politics in Britain: the case of the Respect Party‘, in J. Nielsen (ed.) Muslim Political Participation in Europe, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, p. 299-321.
Part 12. Media
45. Saeed, Amir (2007) ‘Media, Racism and Islamophobia: The Representation of Islam and Muslims in the Media’, Sociology Compass 1(2): 443-462.
46. Abrahamian, Ervand (2003) ‘The US media, Huntington and September 11’, Third World Quarterly 24(3): 529-544.
47. El Hamel, Chouki (2002) ‘Muslim Diaspora in Western Europe: The Islamic Headscarf (Hijab), the Media and Muslims’ Integration in France’, Citizenship Studies 6(3): 293-308.
48. Richardson, John E (2001) ‘British Muslims in the Broadsheet Press: a challenge to cultural hegemony?’ Journalism Studies 2(2): 221-242.
Volume IV. ISLAMOPHOBIA AND RADICALISATION
Part 13. 9/11 and beyond
49. Abbas, Tahir (2012) ‘The symbiotic relationship between Islamophobia and radicalisation, Critical Studies on Terrorism 5(3): 345-358
50. Mandeville, Peter (2009) ‘Muslim Transnational Identity and State Responses in Europe and the UK after 9/11: Political Community, Ideology and Authority’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 35(3): 491-506.
51. Poynting, Scott and Mason, Victoria (2007) ‘The resistible rise of Islamophobia Anti-Muslim racism in the UK and Australia before 11’, Journal of Sociology 43(1): 61-86.
52. Kundnani, Arun (2012) ‘Radicalisation: the journey of a concept’, Race & Class 54(2): 3–25
Part 14. Defining Islamophobia
53. Halliday, Fred (1999) ‘Islamophobia' reconsidered’, Ethnic and Racial Studies 22(5): 892-902.
54. Marranci, Gabrielle (2004) ‘Multiculturalism, Islam and the clash of civilisations theory: rethinking Islamophobia’, Culture and Religion: An Interdisciplinary Journal 5(1): 105-117.
55. Sayyid, Salman (2011) ‘Out of the Devil’s Dictionary’, in S. Sayyid and A. Vakil (eds.) Thinking through Islamophobia: Global Perspectives, London and New York: Hurst.
56. Hussain, Yasmin and Bagguley, Paul (2012) ‘Securitized citizens: Islamophobia, racism and the 7/7 London bombings’, The Sociological Review 60(4): 715-734.
Part 15. Securitisation of Muslims
57. Fekete, Liz (2004) ‘Anti-Muslim Racism and the European Security State’, Race & Class 46(1): 3-29.
58. Awan, I. (2012) I’m a Muslim not an Extremist:’ How the Prevent Strategy has constructed a ‘Suspect’ Community’, Politics & Policy 40(6): 1158-1185.
59. Spalek, Basia (2014) ‘Community Engagement for Counterterrorism in Britain: An Exploration of the Role of "Connectors" in Countering Takfiri Jihadist Terrorism’, Studies in Conflict & Terrorism 37(10): 825-841.
60. Macdonald, Laura Z (2011) ‘Securing Identities, Resisting Terror: Muslim Youth Work in the UK and its Implications for Security’, Religion, State and Society 39(2-3): 177-189.
Part 16. The radicalisation discourse
61. Mythen, Gabe, Walklate, Sandra and Khan, Fatima (2009) ‘‘I’m a Muslim, but I’m not a Terrorist’: Victimization, Risky Identities and the Performance of Safety’, British Journal of Criminology 49(6): 736-754.
62. Choudhury, T and H Fenwick (2011) ‘The impact of counter-terrorism measures on Muslim communities’, International Review of Law, Computers & Technology 25(3): 151-181.
63. Klausen, Jytte (2009) ‘British Counter-Terrorism After 7/7: Adapting Community Policing to the Fight Against Domestic Terrorism’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 35(3): 403-420.
64. Githens-Mazer, Jonathan (2012) ‘The rhetoric and reality: radicalization and political discourse’, International Political Science Review 33(5): 556-567.