Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1100Hits:21603497Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID182045
Title ProperResearching American Muslims
Other Title Informationa Case Study of Surveillance and Racialized State Control
LanguageENG
AuthorAl-Faham, Hajer
Summary / Abstract (Note)How does surveillance shape political science research in the United States? In comparative and international politics, there is a rich literature concerning the conduct of research amid conditions of conflict and state repression. As this literature locates “the field” in distant contexts “over there,” the United States continues to be saturated with various forms of state control. What this portends for American politics research has thus far been examined by a limited selection of scholars. Expanding on their insights, I situate “the field” in the United States and examine surveillance of American Muslims, an understudied case of racialized state control. Drawing on qualitative data from a case study of sixty-nine interviews with Arab and Black American Muslims, I argue that surveillance operated as a two-stage political mechanism that mapped onto research methodologically and substantively. In the first stage, surveillance reconfigured the researcher-researchee dynamic, hindered recruitment and access, and limited data-collection. In the second stage, surveillance colored the self-perceptions, political attitudes, and civic engagement of respondents, thereby indicating a political socialization unfolding among Muslims. The implications of this study suggest that researchers can mitigate against some, but not all, of the challenges presented by surveillance and concomitant forms of state control.
`In' analytical NotePerspectives on Politics Vol.19, No. 4; Dec 2021: p.1131 - 1146
Journal SourcePerspectives on Politics 2021-12 19, 4
Key WordsAmerican Muslims ;  Surveillance and Racialized State Control