In recent years, Islamophobia has seen a disturbing global rise. Blaming Muslim minorities for economic, political, and social problems is an increasingly common rhetorical strategy for politicians in countries worldwide. A narrative of the ""threatening Muslim invader"" is troublingly prevalent, regardless of whether the targets of such rhetoric are born citizens or new arrivals.
Its consequences are deadly and devastating for Uyghurs in China-indefinitely detained in concentration camps-Indian Muslims attacked in pogroms, and the Rohingya victims of genocide. In parts of Europe and North America, the consequences of Islamophobia are less overtly violent but no less harmful: Muslims are banned from wearing hijab, building minarets, opening Islamic schools, or legally immigrating to certain countries. In the United States, Europe, and India, Islamophobic rhetoric is increasingly normalized, fracturing ethnically diverse societies as xenophobic right-wing political ideals accumulate followers at an alarming pace. In turn, Islamophobia in the West gives license to discrimination elsewhere, creating a vicious cycle of Islamophobia.
Global Islamophobia and the Rise of Populism is the first book to systemically examine the complex factors contributing to the rise in Islamophobia and right-wing populism across three continents-North America, Europe and Asia. Internationally renowned scholars offer insightful and empirically grounded analysis linking local contexts with global trends. This groundbreaking book is an essential contribution to discourse on immigration, racism, xenophobia, and human rights.
"Foreword, by Barbara A. Lee 1. Introduction Part 1 Islamophobia in North America: Race, Religion, and Citizenship 2. The Price of Recognition: The One Islam and the Many Joseph Massad 3. The Politics of Vulnerability: Today's Threat to American Muslims' Religious Freedom Asma T. Uddin 4. Islamophobia and the Rise of Ethnonationalist Populism in the United States Saher Selod Part 2 Islamophobia in Europe: Xenophobia, Anti-Semitism and Nationalism 5. Post-Colonialism, Post-National-Socialism, German Reunification, and the Rise of the Far-Right: Making Sense of Islamophobia in Germany Farid Hafez 6. Islamophobia: How the Far Right Went Mainstream in Britain Mobashra Tazamal 7. France's Islamophobic Bloc and the ""Mainstreamization"" of the Far Right Marwan Mohammed 8. Islamophobia Without Muslims? Not Only in Eastern Europe Ivan Kalmar 9. Islamophobia in Russia: Ethnicity, Migration, and National Security Sahar F. Aziz and Sarah Calderone 10. Muslim Life in Belgium: In Search of a Vivre Ensemble John Farmer and Ava Majlesi Part 3 Islamophobia in Asia: Genocide, Pogroms, and Detention 11. Displacing and Disciplining Muslims in India's Burgeoning Hindu Rashtra Audrey Truschke 12. Contesting the Spatialization of Islamophobia in Urban India Stuti Govil and D. Asher Ghertner 13. (Un)Made in China: Uyghur Muslims at the Intersection of Islamophobia and Ethnic Cleansing Khaled A. Beydoun 14. Islamophobia and Genocide: Myanmar's Rohingya Genocide Ronan Lee Conclusion: Lessons from South Africa 15. Confronting Islamophobia: Defeating Colonial Bigotries, Learning From South Africa Ebrahim Rasool Index"
Sahar F. Aziz is a Distinguished Professor of Law at Rutgers University and the Executive Director of the Center for Security, Race and Rights. She is the recipient of the Derrick A. Bell Award from the American Association of Law Schools, a 2021 Soros Equality Fellow, and author of the groundbreaking book The Racial Muslim: When Racism Quashes Religious Freedom. John L. Esposito is a Distinguished Professor of Religion and International Affairs and of Islamic Studies at Georgetown University. He is the Founding Director of the Alwaleed Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding and of The Bridge Initiative, a research project that extends education about Islamophobia to the public. Esposito has been a member of the World Economic Forum's Council of 100 Leaders and the E. C. European Network of Experts on De-Radicalisation, a Senior Scientist for The Gallup Center for Muslim Studies, and an ambassador for the UN Alliance of Civilizations. He has also served as a consultant to the U.S. Department of State and other agencies and organizations worldwide.