Politics and Society

Introduction to Politics and Society

This is to introduce our Politics and Citizenship section. There are huge debates in the political field when it comes to the issue of Muslims in Europe. These are often very controversial discussions that have especially deepened since 9/11. Again and again we hear politicians discussing the question of Muslims’ integration in Europe. Questions about the compatibility of Islam and the West occupy many politicians. Moreover, the association of Islam with danger, terrorism and violence has deepened in various public discussions. One can observe a securitisation of Muslims in various political discourses and practices. Thereby, the issue of trust plays a key role. Framing Muslims in terms of security illustrates a rather distrustful relation to Muslims and the feeling of ‘an enemy within’ as some scholars outlined is expressed.

Different concepts of citizenship were and are still being negotiated in European socities. In France we have a universalist concept of citizenship that is blind to differences and that does not recognise Muslim minorities as such. Various political practices, such as the headscarf ban in schools reflect this rather restrictive concept of citizenship and particular understanding of laicite. It is not very open towards religion and does not necessarily reflect the original meaning of secularism. Differently does the UK conceptualise citizenship. It is much more integrative of differences and is based on a multicultural understanding of citizenship that recognises different cultural and religious attachments. It does not see a necessary discrepancy between universalistic and particularistic identity. Yet, as recent speeches have shown the multicultural citizenship concept is not always welcomed by politicians. Moreover, the UK has been repeatedly accused of having failed multiculturalism and allowing Muslim radicalism to grow. Taking these debates about Muslims in the West as well as citizenship concepts into consideration MTCD aims to investigate issues of trust and mistrust in political discourses and practices in Western societies. 

Islam and Controversy

DATE: Monday 12th January from 6:00pm

VENUE: Brunei Suite, Brunei Gallery, SOAS,
Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, London, WC1H 0XG

On 12th January 2015, a large and enthusiastic audience gathered to celebrate the launch of Dr Anshuman Mondal’s new book, Islam and Controversy: The Politics of Free Speech After Rushdie (Palgrave, Macmillan, 2014). Dr Mondal was joined on a panel by the distinguished pioneer of the theorisation of Muslim identity politics in Britain, Professor Tariq Modood, and by the novelist and commentator Will Self. In an event overshadowed, and given added urgency, by the attacks on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris the previous week, the panel interrogated some of the commonplace assumptions taken to be essential to the free speech debate, pointing out their lineage in a longer history of secular liberalism which now claims the status of normative common sense’, and engaging with the book’s central argument for a new ethics of reading and writing intercultural texts, in the interests of a more equal and fully representative society. 

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Rowan Williams Podcast

On May 7th Asmaa Soliman and Amina Yaqin interviewed Dr Rowan Williams, former Archbishop of Canterbury, on the theological and ethical questions of trust. He spoke about connecting the question of trust to cultural memory; to ask people what faith means; the importance of placing trust intelligently. For more, please listed to our podcast. 

MTCD in Politics and Society

Date: Thursday 28 February 2013
Event: Second Roundtable Event with the Dialogue Society
Title: Muslims, Trust and Cultural Dialogue in Politics and Society
Venue: Dialogue Society, Holloway Road

N.B. Attendance at the Roundtable event is by invitation only.

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