The ongoing situations in Afghanistan and Iraq and high profile debates on multiculturalism raise questions about British foreign policy and the support of British Muslims for the government’s overseas policy decisions. Robert Mason and Sherry Sayed Gadelrab examine opinions of the British Muslim community around political engagement and how stronger links between this community and the coalition government could be developed
Since the Northern disturbances of 2001 and the terrorist attacks of September 11th, the UK governme...
The concern of this chapter, as that of the book as a whole, is to explore contemporary relationship...
The common nomenclature of ethnicity, race and colour has been found wanting in theorising and deali...
This paper uses the 2010 Ethnic Minority British Election Study to look at the political attitudes ...
In August 1999, on the day that eight British Muslims from Birmingham were convicted in Yemen for al...
The recent landmark election results in 2010 witnessed the end of an era for Labour under Gordon Bro...
Abstract This article engages debates about Muslim integration in Western societies by analyzing tru...
While the majority of British Muslim organizations established by the first generation of immigrants...
Report on the LMEI's one-week intensive course on political Islam at SOAS (March 23-27, 2009
Soon after the Conservative-led Coalition government came to power in 2010, Baroness Sayeeda Warsi a...
Muslim schools in Britain have emerged as a highly salient issue that at times reinforces, and at ot...
In 2002 the UK’s Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) launched the comprehensive five-year Ne...
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">The recent landmark election results in 2010 witnessed the end of an ...
After the 7 July and 21 July 2005 attacks on London the government-sponsored effort to ‘prevent extr...
The principle question informing this paper is: how will the West in general, and Britain and Austra...
Since the Northern disturbances of 2001 and the terrorist attacks of September 11th, the UK governme...
The concern of this chapter, as that of the book as a whole, is to explore contemporary relationship...
The common nomenclature of ethnicity, race and colour has been found wanting in theorising and deali...
This paper uses the 2010 Ethnic Minority British Election Study to look at the political attitudes ...
In August 1999, on the day that eight British Muslims from Birmingham were convicted in Yemen for al...
The recent landmark election results in 2010 witnessed the end of an era for Labour under Gordon Bro...
Abstract This article engages debates about Muslim integration in Western societies by analyzing tru...
While the majority of British Muslim organizations established by the first generation of immigrants...
Report on the LMEI's one-week intensive course on political Islam at SOAS (March 23-27, 2009
Soon after the Conservative-led Coalition government came to power in 2010, Baroness Sayeeda Warsi a...
Muslim schools in Britain have emerged as a highly salient issue that at times reinforces, and at ot...
In 2002 the UK’s Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) launched the comprehensive five-year Ne...
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">The recent landmark election results in 2010 witnessed the end of an ...
After the 7 July and 21 July 2005 attacks on London the government-sponsored effort to ‘prevent extr...
The principle question informing this paper is: how will the West in general, and Britain and Austra...
Since the Northern disturbances of 2001 and the terrorist attacks of September 11th, the UK governme...
The concern of this chapter, as that of the book as a whole, is to explore contemporary relationship...
The common nomenclature of ethnicity, race and colour has been found wanting in theorising and deali...