This paper explores the negotiation of political secularism by a migrant group who have a shared religious heritage with the majority population in their new country but are identified as a minority Other due to their ethnic and national origins. Middle Eastern Christians like other religious minorities in the Middle East, have tended to favour “secular values” in politics as a means of attempting to acquire equal rights as citizens and limiting the public role of Islam. The UK can be seen as providing new opportunities for Middle Eastern Christians given its Christian heritage and support for religious tolerance and equality. For many of these migrants, there were multiple reasons for leaving the Middle East including economic, societal, f...
In the United States, active church membership among ethnic and racial minorities has been linked to...
The integration of Muslim immigrants in Western countries especially Britain hasattracted wider atte...
This chapter examines the strength of “symbolic barriers” between majorities and Muslims of immigran...
This paper explores the negotiation of political secularism by a migrant group who have a shared rel...
This article explores how migrants experience the process of becoming (and being) citizens by taking...
Since the early 2000s in many countries of the Global North, Muslim religious identities have become...
This work was supported by the HERA Joint Research Programme (www.heranet.info) which is co-funded b...
This article attempts to answer the question: To what extent the secularity of Europe facilitates or...
Religion, and in particular Christianity, is losing ground in the UK as fewer people identify as Chr...
Over the last fifty years, British society has changed from a Christendom model, where the default r...
This paper questions the conflation of ethnicity and race in UK public policy and in the media. The ...
This study seeks to address a gap in the literature with regard to the Christian Palestinians. As me...
The increasingly politicized presence of Muslim communities in Britain today is raising issues not o...
Zagro and Coppola are aware that depicting the situation of minorities in the Middle East is challen...
LSE’s Chetan Bhatt analyses how minority groups in civil society are conceived in policy terms
In the United States, active church membership among ethnic and racial minorities has been linked to...
The integration of Muslim immigrants in Western countries especially Britain hasattracted wider atte...
This chapter examines the strength of “symbolic barriers” between majorities and Muslims of immigran...
This paper explores the negotiation of political secularism by a migrant group who have a shared rel...
This article explores how migrants experience the process of becoming (and being) citizens by taking...
Since the early 2000s in many countries of the Global North, Muslim religious identities have become...
This work was supported by the HERA Joint Research Programme (www.heranet.info) which is co-funded b...
This article attempts to answer the question: To what extent the secularity of Europe facilitates or...
Religion, and in particular Christianity, is losing ground in the UK as fewer people identify as Chr...
Over the last fifty years, British society has changed from a Christendom model, where the default r...
This paper questions the conflation of ethnicity and race in UK public policy and in the media. The ...
This study seeks to address a gap in the literature with regard to the Christian Palestinians. As me...
The increasingly politicized presence of Muslim communities in Britain today is raising issues not o...
Zagro and Coppola are aware that depicting the situation of minorities in the Middle East is challen...
LSE’s Chetan Bhatt analyses how minority groups in civil society are conceived in policy terms
In the United States, active church membership among ethnic and racial minorities has been linked to...
The integration of Muslim immigrants in Western countries especially Britain hasattracted wider atte...
This chapter examines the strength of “symbolic barriers” between majorities and Muslims of immigran...