with Claire L. Adida and David D. Laitin, 2016, Harvard University Press
Amid mounting fears of violent Islamic extremism, many Europeans ask whether Muslim immigrants can integrate into historically Christian countries. In a groundbreaking ethnographic investigation of France’s Muslim migrant population, Why Muslim Integration Fails in Christian-Heritage Societies explores this complex question. The authors conclude that both Muslim and non-Muslim French must share responsibility for the slow progress of Muslim integration. Claire Adida, David Laitin, and Marie-Anne Valfort found that in France, Muslims are widely perceived as threatening, based in large part on cultural differences between Muslim and rooted French that feed both rational and irrational Islamophobia. Relying on a unique methodology to isolate the religious component of discrimination, the authors identify a discriminatory equilibrium in which both Muslim immigrants and native French act negatively toward one another in a self-perpetuating, vicious circle. Disentangling the rational and irrational threads of Islamophobia is essential if Europe hopes to repair a social fabric that has frayed around the issue of Muslim immigration. Muslim immigrants must address their own responsibility for the failures of integration, and Europeans must acknowledge the anti-Islam sentiments at the root of their antagonism. The authors outline public policy solutions aimed at promoting religious diversity in fair-minded host societies.
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SELECTED MENTIONS & REVIEWS
Book review, November 23, 2018, Gert Jan Geling, Liberales, an independent liberal think tank based in Belgium.
Book reviews, September 9, 2018, Abdulkader Sinno, Amaney Jamal and Anne Norton, Perspectives on Politics 16(3): 760-766. Response and rejoinders, August 2019.
Book review, June 26, 2018, José Miguel Dias Rocha, Sahipkıran Center for Strategic Studies (SASAM), a think tank promoting an inclusive society based in Ankara.
Book review, September 5, 2017, Jocelyne Cesari, Journal of Islamic Studies 29(1): 135-136.
Do Muslim immigrants assimilate?, April 3, 2017, Jeremy N. Neufeld, Niskanen Center, a think tank promoting an open society based in Washington.
Book review, January 31, 2017, Jennifer Fredette, Sociology of Religion 78(1): 100-101.
Book review, January 16, 2017, Tom Wilson, Reviews in Religion & Theology 24(1): 19-21.
Book review, August 16, 2016, Cathy Lisa Schneider, Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics 1(2): 353-355.
Book review, June 20, 2016, Kwan-Lamar Blount-Hill, International Affairs 92(4): 1002-1003.
Book review, June 7, 2016, Hakan Erdagöz, Ethnic and Racial Studies 39(13): 2437-2439.
Is French Islam an Oxymoron?, March 28, 2016, Aziz Z. Huq, The New Rambler.
Brussels suicide attacks "shocking but not surprising", Stanford experts say, March 25, 2016, Steve Fyffe, Stanford News.
Teufelskreis aus Diskriminierung und Integrationsverweigerung, March 1, 2016, Johann Hinrich Claussen, Süddeutsche Zeitung.
Book review, February 5, 2016, John R. Weeks, Weeks Population.
Book review, January 29, 2016, Malise Ruthven, Financial Times.
Le temps du lâche soulagement, December 21, 2015, Pierre-Yves Geoffard, Libération.
Exclusion, not unemployment, explains ISIS recruitment?, December 1, 2015, Christopher Blattman.
Islamofobia en Europa: Responsabilidades compartidas, February 6, 2015, Juan Antonio Sacaluga, Nuevatribuna.es.