Bhabha
IB Veteran
- Messages
- 792
- Reaction score
- 44
- Gender
- Female
- Religion
- Islam

My dear brothers and sisters, I would like to share something interesting. In one of my graduate seminars this term, we had to present our working papers on issues of security, identity and citizenship. As I was looking at the schedule for our mini conference on our papers, I noticed that more than half the class focused on Islam and Muslims within their working papers. There are only two students in our class who are Muslim, a sister and myself. I was surprised, but then again I have begun to see a movement within the political discipline that looks towards Islam, whether it is to explore the contributions of the Muslim world in terms of science, the Cosmopolitan identity of the Muslim Ummah, or the realization that legislative and security practices against Muslims within the context of Europe / Western nations are yet again another form of intrinsically hidden colonial management practices. Regardless of the reasons, them movement across the discipline is delightful. More scholars, Muslim and non-Muslim are probing questions into Islam and engaging with it in their work. Furthermore, the mantra of "secularism" is actually beginning to cripple and fall within our discipline. Scholars are questioning the validity of 'secularism' when religion and thus belief is a pertinent and important aspect of our societies.
I would like to keep this thread to discuss articles, books and scholars in the discipline of politics that have engaged with Islam and those that continue to engage with it. Also, to discuss scholars that criticize the current implementation of security and legislative policies in the EU.