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ID144900
Title ProperBritish state ‘security syndrome’ and Muslim diversity
Other Title Informationchallenges for liberal democracy in the age of terror
LanguageENG
AuthorBonino, Stefano
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper explores the securitisation of British Muslims within a global context in which tensions are reignited by the threat that Islamist terrorism, and Islam more generally, are considered to pose to the West. While Western involvement in Muslim-majority countries continues to fuel the idea of a ‘clash of civilisations’, domestic responses to terrorism and extremism take forward its rhetoric. At the heart of 15 years of wide-ranging responses lies the state ‘security syndrome’. Operating through the paradigm of risk reduction, the British state has reasserted its primary role as the distributor of security in ways that move beyond the surgical targeting of violent Islamists and their supporters and instead risk impacting on Muslims qua Muslims. Counter-terrorism and anti-extremism notions and practices that conflate security risks and cultural threats signal that Great Britain is a liberal democracy that is yet to fully foster positive inter-community relations and achieve social cohesion.
`In' analytical NoteContemporary Islam Vol. 10, No.2; May 2016: p. 223–247
Journal SourceContemporary Islam Vol: 10 No 2
Key WordsSecurity ;  Great Britain ;  Democracy ;  Counter-Terrorism ;  Muslims ;  Clash of Civilisations ;  9/11


 
 
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