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Confronting Islamophobia: Civil Rights Advocacy in the United States

Posted on:2012-09-12Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of California, Santa BarbaraCandidate:Love, Erik RobertFull Text:PDF
GTID:1466390011459121Subject:American Studies
Abstract/Summary:
This dissertation integrates the history of Arab, Muslim, Sikh, and South Asian American civil rights advocacy organizations since 1980 into extant sociological knowledge about civil rights advocacy. Beginning with an introduction that reviews sociological thinking on race and racism, the dissertation then provides a background on so-called Islamophobia, racialized discrimination affecting a wide range of groups. This is followed by an analysis of current sociological theory on advocacy organizations and social movements. A chapter describing the multiple methodologies of the research follows, including details on the qualitative interviews, content analysis of documents produced by several nationally prominent advocacy organizations, and the creation of a custom database of information covering more than 400 advocacy organizations in places across the United States.;Empirical data are presented in chapters five through seven. Chapter Five focuses on the important intersection between race and gender in efforts to confront Islamophobia. Among the findings presented is a surprisingly well-defined gendered division of labor---where one organization has a staff of almost exclusively women, and another organization has very few women---that appears in the Muslim, Sikh, and South Asian American organizations in the study. Chapter Six takes on the interplay between advocacy organizations and the state agencies toward which advocacy work is oriented. The chapter considers the roles of state agencies in the legislative, executive, and judicial branches. I find that many state agencies have effectively assigned a racial category to Arab, Muslim, Sikh, and South Asian Americans. The Department of Justice and other agencies tasked with fighting discrimination have convened "Middle Eastern American" meetings that pull together advocacy organizations from disparate communities unified by racial identity. Chapter Seven considers whether this joint, "Middle Eastern American" racial identity served as a catalyst for coalition building among advocacy organizations. I find very little panethnic coalition work along these broad lines of a racial or identity-based alliance, although there is a great deal of ad-hoc coalition work that centers on specific issues. The concluding chapter suggests pathways for future research and revisits the themes of the introduction in light of the dissertation's findings.
Keywords/Search Tags:Civil rights advocacy, South asian, Chapter, State, Islamophobia, American
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