Integrating Islam in France (and Europe)
Abstract
While European states have successfully integrated waves of immigrants in the past, the recent settlement of a large Muslim population poses a variety of daunting challenges, particularly when viewed against the backdrop of growing Islamic fundamentalism worldwide. Because of the size of its Muslim population and its universalist definition of citizenship, France provides a good test case for the encounter between Islam and the West. In a new book, 热点爆料入口 asst. prof. Jonathan Laurence (political science) and co-author Justin Vaisse offer extensive and original insights into how such integration can be fostered in a diverse, secular democracy. Many in France and elsewhere view the growing role of Muslims in their society with a jaundiced eye, suspecting that new Muslim political and religious networks are a threat to European rule of law and the French way of life. Not surprisingly, however, the reality of the situation is far too complicated to be captured by slogans and slurs. Integrating Islam examines the complex reality of Muslim integration in France-its successes, failures, and future challenges.
Speaker Bio
Jonathan Laurence聽is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Boston College. He holds a B.A from Cornell University and a Ph.D. in Government from Harvard University. His principal areas of teaching and research are Comparative Politics, European Politics, and the integration of Muslims into European politics and society. Prof. Laurence is an Affiliated Scholar with the Center on the U.S. and Europe at the Brookings Institution, where he has also been a Visiting Fellow. His most recent publications include Integrating Islam: Political and Religious Challenges in Contemporary France (Brookings, 2006), co-authored with Justin Va茂sse; and "Managing Transnational Islam: Muslims and the State in Western Europe," in Craig Parsons and Timothy Smeeding, eds.,聽Immigration and the Transformation of Europe聽(Cambridge, 2006).
Event Photos
Event Recap
On October 4 the Boisi Center welcomed Professor Jonathan Laurence of Boston College鈥檚 Political Science Department, who presented his latest research on the integration of Islam and Muslims into French society.聽 Laurence began by debunking several myths about Islam in Europe, including the idea that Islam is growing at an alarming rate and the perception that French Muslims generally hold extreme cultural and political attitudes.聽 Laurence then raised the question:聽 Are the present conflicts arising simply out of poor communication between immigrant Muslims and their 鈥渉ost societies,鈥 or do they manifest a massive failure of the system to integrate this new population?
Laurence put the current issues in historical perspective by recalling the first round of discussion about headscarves in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the controversy over Salman Rushdie鈥檚 work, and the initial Gulf War.聽 Now, as Muslims become a larger and more established group in European societies, new questions are being asked about the impact of their presence.聽 Is a new continent emerging which might be called 鈥淓urabia鈥?聽 Do the meetings between government and religious leaders in castles around Europe evoke the ghosts of Napoleon and Mussolini?聽 In this era of communications technology and easy travel between countries, has the assimilationist urge of immigrants subsided such that a new kind of multi-ethnic state is emerging?聽 In other words, to what extent do Muslims want to become 鈥淔rench,鈥 鈥淕erman鈥, and so on?聽 What about the pluralism within Islam itself and how these various groups are represented in the host societies?聽 Finally, are these concerns encouraging a more right-leaning or conservative host state, and what might be the wider implications of such a tendency?
The group engaged in a lively discussion about these and other issues, considering the history and implications for Muslims and other groups in the U. S.聽 In the end, the group observed that although there is some policing going on in societies where Muslims have arrived more recently, this has usually happened with the process of emancipation of new groups:聽 increased oversight is often the tradeoff as greater freedom is achieved.聽 What all this means for the future of interstate and intrastate relations remains an urgent question.
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Further Reading
Jocelyne Cesari,聽When Islam and Democracy Meet: Muslims in Europe and in the United States聽(Palgrave Macmillan, 2006).
Jytte Klausen,聽The Islamic Challenge: Politics and Religion in Western Europe聽(Oxford University Press, 2005).
John Bowen,聽Why the French Don't Like Headscarves: Islam, the State, and Public Space聽(Princeton University Press, 2006).
Jonathan Laurence and Justin Vaisse,聽Integrating Islam: Political And Religious Challenges in Contemporary France聽(Brookings Institution Press, 2006).
Shireen Hunter, ed.,聽Islam, Europe's Second Religion: The New Social, Cultural, and Political Landscape聽(Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers, 2002).