This article examines the debates that have arisen in relation to the establishment of sites of worship by Britain's minority religious groups. Frequently, the buildings of non-Christian religious communities have been portrayed as `alien' and incommensurate with surrounding urban landscapes, and there are numerous cases in which such opposition has had a decisive bearing on the success or failure of plans to develop such sites of worship. However, beyond this geography of exclusion, we have begun to detect a changing attitude in the ways such buildings are positioned in relation to their local urban landscapes. In several cases, new sites of worship have been represented as welcome contributions to the production of multicultural, ethnical...
This article examines the dramatic changes brought to English townscapes by Islam, Hinduism, and Sik...
This article examines the dramatic changes brought to English townscapes by Islam, Hinduism, and Sik...
The background to this article is the debate on cities as post-secular and superdiverse. The authors...
This article examines the debates that have arisen in relation to the establishment of sites of wors...
This article examines the debates that have arisen in relation to the establishment of sites of wors...
This article examines the debates that have arisen in relation to the establishment of sites of wors...
This article examines the debates that have arisen in relation to the establishment of sites of wors...
This article aims to expand the scope of existing research on ‘race’, ethnicity and planning by expl...
This article aims to expand the scope of existing research on ‘race’, ethnicity and planning by expl...
This article aims to expand the scope of existing research on ‘race’, ethnicity and planning by expl...
Based on qualitative research in Southampton, this thesis considers the intersections of religion, s...
A corollary of the development of Muslim communities in Britain has been a steady growth in the quan...
The background to this article is the debate on cities as post-secular and super-diverse. The author...
This article examines the dramatic changes brought to English townscapes by Islam, Hinduism, and Sik...
This article examines the dramatic changes brought to English townscapes by Islam, Hinduism, and Sik...
This article examines the dramatic changes brought to English townscapes by Islam, Hinduism, and Sik...
This article examines the dramatic changes brought to English townscapes by Islam, Hinduism, and Sik...
The background to this article is the debate on cities as post-secular and superdiverse. The authors...
This article examines the debates that have arisen in relation to the establishment of sites of wors...
This article examines the debates that have arisen in relation to the establishment of sites of wors...
This article examines the debates that have arisen in relation to the establishment of sites of wors...
This article examines the debates that have arisen in relation to the establishment of sites of wors...
This article aims to expand the scope of existing research on ‘race’, ethnicity and planning by expl...
This article aims to expand the scope of existing research on ‘race’, ethnicity and planning by expl...
This article aims to expand the scope of existing research on ‘race’, ethnicity and planning by expl...
Based on qualitative research in Southampton, this thesis considers the intersections of religion, s...
A corollary of the development of Muslim communities in Britain has been a steady growth in the quan...
The background to this article is the debate on cities as post-secular and super-diverse. The author...
This article examines the dramatic changes brought to English townscapes by Islam, Hinduism, and Sik...
This article examines the dramatic changes brought to English townscapes by Islam, Hinduism, and Sik...
This article examines the dramatic changes brought to English townscapes by Islam, Hinduism, and Sik...
This article examines the dramatic changes brought to English townscapes by Islam, Hinduism, and Sik...
The background to this article is the debate on cities as post-secular and superdiverse. The authors...