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2022, IISRA
International Islamophobia Studies Research Association (IISRA) Inaugural conference States of Islamophobia (Studies) Istanbul-Turkey July 14-16, 2022 https://irdp.submittable.com/submit/225879/cfp-states-of-islamophobia-studies While research over the past few decades has highlighted the various ways discrimination, racism, and bigotry have become common occurrence in the lives of Muslims as a racialized and targeted group, the need for more systematic and persistent scholarship remains urgent. In the context of the intensified levels of violence and cases of genocide directed at Muslims and the demonization of Islam as a “non-Western” religion, the the International Islamophobia Studies Research Association’s (IISRA) vision is to form the global architecture for the field of Islamophobia Studies. In the Islamic tradition, the Arabic acronym for this academic association refers to a nocturnal journey leading to knowledge and spiritual insight known as ‘Isra.’ As an interdisciplinary scholarly network, IISRA draws on this meaning in the development of a ‘global caravan’ dedicated to mobilizing academic knowledge that documents and challenges Islamophobia on a planetary scale. The inaugural conference will be an important step toward actualizing IISRA’s mission to support the dissemination of academic research and publicly engaged scholarship on Islamophobia through academic fora that will facilitate the transnational, multidirectional flow of knowledge across academia, policy and government, media, and global civil society. By engaging in knowledge mobilization activities—such as networking, disseminating, exchanging, and supporting research-based knowledge, IISRA will provide the hub for academic leadership in the field of Islamophobia Studies. The call for papers is an open invitation for all the co-producers of knowledge, resistance, and decolonial framing of the world to gather and discuss how to bring about the future horizons to which we all aspire. We invite papers that take stock of the “States of Islamophobia Studies” in a variety of interdisciplinary and transnational contexts. The conference seeks papers that examine how the Muslim subject is constructed in public discourses, the distinct periods (historical or contemporary), and the regional specificity of such framings. We encourage the submission of fully-formed panels that can address the theme of the inaugural conference, either from one particular academic field or in an interdisciplinary framing. Abstracts are limited to 300 words and a one paragraph (100 words) biography to be used for the program, if the paper is selected. Abstracts are due by May. 31st, 2022 Response to abstracts by June 5th, 2022 Submit Abstract online IISRA's Board Hatem Bazian - President, USA Salman Sayyid - Vice President, UK Jasmin Zine - Vice President, Canada Munir Jiwa- Secretary, USA Saul Takahashi- Treasurer, Japan Board Members at Large Abdool Karim Vakil, UK Amina Easaat-Das, UK Rabab Abdul-Hadi, USA Nadia Fadil, Belgium Farid Hafez, Austria and USA Elsadig Elsheikh, USA Mattais Gardell, Sweden Marwan Muhammed, France
English Submission - Islamophobia and Social Sciences: Contemporary Issues-Paris 6th Annual Islamophobia Conference Call for Papers https://irdp.submittable.com/submit/143189/islamophobia-and-social-sciences-contemporary-issues-paris-6th-annual-islamophob French Submission - Islamophobie et sciences sociales : Questions contemporaines-French Site https://irdp.submittable.com/submit/144045/islamophobie-et-sciences-sociales-questions-contemporaines-french-site
The theme for the ninth annual International Islamophobia Conference is framed by a critical article written by Professor S. Sayyid and Abdoolkarim Vakil (https://irdproject.com/reports-of-islamophobia-1997-2017/) on the occasion of Runnymede Trust publishing, " Islamophobia: Still a Challenge for us all ". We included the full article below to contextualize the ninth annual conference call for papers, which seeks to examine five areas framed by the authors and abstracts should engage one or more of these strands. The conference welcomes panels organized around one of the themes or a panel that have distinct papers each covering one of the themes.
Table of Contents Editorial Statement 7-12 Reconstructing the Muslim Self: Muhammad Iqbal, Khudi, and the Modern Self Hasan Azad 14-28 Reading Power: Muslims in the War on Terror Discourse Dr. Uzma Jamil 29-42 Disciplining the ‘Muslim Subject’: The Role of Security Agencies in Establishing Islamic Theology within the State’s Academia Dr. Farid Hafez 43-57 The Islamophobic-Neoliberal-Educational Complex Ahmed Kabel 58-75 “Ex-Muslims,” Bible Prophecy, and Islamophobia: Rhetoric and Reality in the Narratives of Walid Shoebat, Kamal Saleem, Ergun and Emir Caner Christopher Cameron Smith 76-93 The Politics of Arab and Muslim American Identity in a Time of Crisis: The 1986 House of Representatives Hearing on Ethnically Motivated Violence Against Arab-Americans Maxwell Leung 94-113 A Chronicle of A Disappearance Mapping the Figure of the Muslim in Berlin’s Verfassungsschutz Reports (2002-2009) Anna-Esther Younes 114-142 The Socio-political Context of Islamophobic Prejudices Denise Helly and Jonathan Dubé 143-156 The Islamophobia Industry, Hate, and Its Impact on Muslim Immigrants and OIC State Development Joseph Kaminski 157-176
International Islamophobia Studies and Research Association Present The Imagined, Real, Embraceable, Threatening and the in-Between Muslim Subject: From the Inquisition to War on Terror and Securitization! Call for Papers: Submit Online https://irdp.submittable.com/submit/150249/cfp-the-imagined-real-embraceable-threatening-and-the-in-between-muslim-subje Co-Sponsored: Islamophobia Research and Documentation Project University of California, Berkeley & Centre for Ethnicity and Racism Studies University of Leeds, UK Islamophobia Studies Journal & ReOrient Graduate Theological Union Center for Islamic Studies Haas Institute for Fair and Inclusive Society
Special Volume Editor’s Statement: Comparative Approaches to the Study of Islamophobia in Europe and Beyond Farid Hafez University of Salzburg Comparing Islamophobia with other phenomena is nothing new. Recent scholarship in Islamophobia Studies primarily conceptualizes Islamophobia as a form of racism, especially within the Anglo-Saxon scientific community. At the same time, scholars in different areas of the world explore Islamophobia by drawing on the most popular and widest studied forms of racism, e.g. anti-Semitism in Germany, anti-Communism in the United States and anti-Black racism in Britain and the USA. This special issue of the Islamophobia Studies Journal takes a closer look at comparative research on Islamophobia. Farid Hafez starts with an article on the state of the art of contemporary comparative studies on anti-Semitism and Islamophobia and takes especially German and English literature into consideration. He concludes in presenting blind spots of both traditions and identifies fruitful future research to be done. Fatih Ünal analyzes both phenomena in their structural and dispositional similarities and differences from a social psychological perspective based on a survey with young adults from Berlin. Also Henk Dekker and Jolanda van der Noll conducted a study based on Dutch youths’ attitudes toward Islam and Muslims, and their attitudes toward Judaism and Jews. They ask to what extent Islamophobia is empirically a unique phenomenon, or that it is not funda-mentally different from negative attitudes toward other out-groups. They conclude that in order to understand individual differences in Islamophobia, one needs to consider cog-nitions and emotions targeted at Islam and Muslims specifically. Based on a comparative understanding of anti-Muslim racism in Hannover (Germany) and Vienna (Austria), Eva Kalny presents strategies of how to counter Islamophobia in the classroom. Ineke Van der Valk explores the state of the art of racism and Islamophobia Studies. She argues that unlike anti-Semitism, racism as well as Islamophobia are an under-researched field of study. She shows how academics, politics and the police struggle with social problems and concepts. Based on a case study on police practices she illustrated that the under-theorization and lack of recognition and know-how of problems related to racism and discrimination toward Muslims is not only detrimental for science, but also has undesirable practical implications. Peter O’Brien examines a form of resistance to Islamophobia in what he calls “Europhobia” (essentializing and distorting depictions of Europe [and the West] as thoroughly decadent, corrupt, and sadistic) by Islamists. With the category of “inverted othering”, he system-atically compares Islamophobic and Europhobic discourse in Europe. A theory-informed article, which discusses Islamophobia as anti-Muslim racism is presented by Fanny Uri-Müller and Benjamin Opratko. Wolfgang Aschauer presents the multidimensional nature of Islamophobia with the helo of a Mixed Method Approach to construct the Attitudes Towards Muslims Scale (ATMS). Stephanie Wright looks at the recent discourse of Islamophobes in the USA on ‘Creeping Sharia’. She analyzes these recent discourses in light of broader historical and discursive practices in the United States. Two cases are analyzed: the debates over the US Constitution in 1787-88; and anti-Mormon polemics in the mid-nineteenth century. Coskun Canan and Naika Foroutan demonstrate in their article what they call “the paradox of equal belonging of Muslims.” Adapting Axel Honneth and Ferdinand Sutterlüty’s model of normative paradox, they show how the ongoing process of social integration of Muslims produces reverse effects of disrespect. They present the first results of a representative telephone survey conducted among German citizens with more than 8,000 respondents. By using representative surveys from Germany (2005, 2007, and 2011), Marcus Eisentraut and Aribert Heyder try to examine several causes of Islamophobia. With the help of structural equation modeling, they investigate the effect of age and education on perceptions of Islam and Muslims.
Virtual Internment Islamophobia, Social Technologies of Surveillance and Unequal Citizenship Islamophobia Research and Documentation Project University of California, Berkeley & Centre for Ethnicity and Racism Studies University of Leeds, UK Islamophobia Studies Journal & ReOrient GTU’s Center for Islamic Studies Haas Institute for Fair and Inclusive Society Call for Papers 10th Annual International Islamophobia Conference. Submit Online: https://irdp.submittable.com/submit/128453/virtual-internment-islamophobia-social-technologies-of-surveillance-and-unequal Note: Abstracts are limited to 300 words and a one paragraph (100 words) biography to be used for the program, if the paper is selected. Abstracts are due by Jan. 30th, 2019 Response to abstracts by Feb. 15th, 2019 Final Invite by March 1st, 2019 Submit Abstract online
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