Responses to and interpretation of anti-Muslim racism in Canada : a community perspective

Against the backdrop of rising levels of anti-“Muslim” racism (aka Islamophobia) in Canada, coupled with the nation-state’s targeting and surveillance of these communities, my dissertation sets out to interpret the responses to this racism by the affected communities themselves. In this study, I emp...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gova, Alnoor
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/55199
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-55199
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-551992018-01-05T17:28:38Z Responses to and interpretation of anti-Muslim racism in Canada : a community perspective Gova, Alnoor Against the backdrop of rising levels of anti-“Muslim” racism (aka Islamophobia) in Canada, coupled with the nation-state’s targeting and surveillance of these communities, my dissertation sets out to interpret the responses to this racism by the affected communities themselves. In this study, I employ qualitative methodology within a critical race theoretical framework informed by indigenous and post-colonial theory. After inviting participation from self-identified Muslim and Arab community organizations, whether outwardly responding to racism or not, over a one year period (2011-2012), I interviewed eleven diverse organizations, all of which are working in various capabilities and focus on community capacity building – including in the sectors of professional mentorship and networking, activities such as multi/inter-faith programming, social services, and advocacy for their communities. I asked participants to share their narratives and views on a wide array of questions: their assessment of the situation of their communities and constituencies in Canada, their experiences with “community government,” and their assessment of the “good Muslim/bad Muslim” nexus. I classify data I gathered into a heuristic of three types of responses: direct, status and native informant, and argue that although most of them fall into the range of status, it is direct responses – ones that commence and attend to racial injustice – that can have the most positive impact in terms of overall responses to systemic anti-Muslim racism. Education, Faculty of Graduate 2015-10-30T19:40:24Z 2015-11-05T03:39:55 2015 2016-02 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/55199 eng Attribution-NoDerivs 2.5 Canada http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/2.5/ca/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Against the backdrop of rising levels of anti-“Muslim” racism (aka Islamophobia) in Canada, coupled with the nation-state’s targeting and surveillance of these communities, my dissertation sets out to interpret the responses to this racism by the affected communities themselves. In this study, I employ qualitative methodology within a critical race theoretical framework informed by indigenous and post-colonial theory. After inviting participation from self-identified Muslim and Arab community organizations, whether outwardly responding to racism or not, over a one year period (2011-2012), I interviewed eleven diverse organizations, all of which are working in various capabilities and focus on community capacity building – including in the sectors of professional mentorship and networking, activities such as multi/inter-faith programming, social services, and advocacy for their communities. I asked participants to share their narratives and views on a wide array of questions: their assessment of the situation of their communities and constituencies in Canada, their experiences with “community government,” and their assessment of the “good Muslim/bad Muslim” nexus. I classify data I gathered into a heuristic of three types of responses: direct, status and native informant, and argue that although most of them fall into the range of status, it is direct responses – ones that commence and attend to racial injustice – that can have the most positive impact in terms of overall responses to systemic anti-Muslim racism. === Education, Faculty of === Graduate
author Gova, Alnoor
spellingShingle Gova, Alnoor
Responses to and interpretation of anti-Muslim racism in Canada : a community perspective
author_facet Gova, Alnoor
author_sort Gova, Alnoor
title Responses to and interpretation of anti-Muslim racism in Canada : a community perspective
title_short Responses to and interpretation of anti-Muslim racism in Canada : a community perspective
title_full Responses to and interpretation of anti-Muslim racism in Canada : a community perspective
title_fullStr Responses to and interpretation of anti-Muslim racism in Canada : a community perspective
title_full_unstemmed Responses to and interpretation of anti-Muslim racism in Canada : a community perspective
title_sort responses to and interpretation of anti-muslim racism in canada : a community perspective
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/55199
work_keys_str_mv AT govaalnoor responsestoandinterpretationofantimuslimracismincanadaacommunityperspective
_version_ 1718585004593774592