Two Islamophobias? Racism and religion as distinct but mutually supportive dimensions of anti‐Muslim prejudice

Author:

Jones Stephen H.1ORCID,Unsworth Amy2

Affiliation:

1. School of Social Policy University of Birmingham Birmingham UK

2. Faculty of Maths and Physical Sciences University College London London UK

Abstract

AbstractDebates about Islamophobia have been blighted by the question of whether the prejudice can be defined as a form of racism or as hostility to religion (or a combination of the two). This paper sheds light on this debate by presenting the findings of a new nationally representative survey, focused on the UK, that contrasts perceptions of Muslims not only with perceptions of other ethnic and religious minorities but also with perceptions of Islam as a religious tradition. We find that prejudice against Muslims is higher than for any other group examined other than Travellers. We also find contrasting demographic drivers of prejudice towards Muslims and towards Islam. Across most prejudice measures we analyse, intolerant views are generally significantly associated with being male, voting Conservative and being older, although not with Anglican identity. We find, however, that class effects vary depending on the question's focus. Anti‐immigration sentiment – including support for a ‘Muslim ban’ – is significantly correlated with being working‐class. However, prejudice towards Islam as a body of teachings (tested using a question measuring perceptions of religious literalism) is significantly correlated with being middle‐class, as is negative sentiment towards Travellers. Using these findings, the paper makes an argument for supplementing recent scholarship on the associations between racism and Islamophobia with analyses focusing on misperceptions of belief.

Funder

British Academy

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference56 articles.

1. Why I’m opposed to Ilhan Omar’s bill against Islamophobia;Alinejad M.;Washington Post,2022

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