2019
DOI: 10.1080/01419870.2019.1588339
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Conflating the Muslim refugee and the terror suspect: responses to the Syrian refugee “crisis” in Brexit Britain

Abstract: The Syrian refugee "crisis" has prompted contradictory responses of securitization of European borders on the one hand, and grassroots compassion on the other, that posit a universal conception of the human deserving of equal rights to safety irrespective of racial or religious difference. However, in the aftermath of the 2015 and 2016 Paris terror attacks there has been a backlash against refugees amid fears of Islamist terrorists exploiting refugee channels to enter Europe, as well as an upsurge in a populis… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…In France, the far-right National Rally has been linked to xenophobic sentiments towards Muslims (Chrisafis, 2017), but publicly the party calls for policies that restrict all non-European migrants (Goodliffe, 2012). Anti-immigration sentiment in general, and particularly against Muslims, is thought to be at least partially responsible for citizens of the United Kingdom voting to leave the EU in 2016 (Abbas, 2019;Abrams and Travaglino, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In France, the far-right National Rally has been linked to xenophobic sentiments towards Muslims (Chrisafis, 2017), but publicly the party calls for policies that restrict all non-European migrants (Goodliffe, 2012). Anti-immigration sentiment in general, and particularly against Muslims, is thought to be at least partially responsible for citizens of the United Kingdom voting to leave the EU in 2016 (Abbas, 2019;Abrams and Travaglino, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cologne is obviously not the only moral panic over migration that has swept across Europe in the last few years. Other notable examples include the January 2015 Charlie Hebdo shooting and the November 2015 Paris attack which, like the events in Cologne, ignited discussions about the need to enhance European border enforcement (Abbas, 2019; De Genova, 2017). While there is no evidence to support the claim that migrants pose a threat to European security, gender equality, public order, welfare and so on (Ceyhan and Tsoukala, 2002), European policymakers have responded by introducing new forms of migration control, including new detention centres, surveillance programmes, hostile environment policies, ‘hotspots’ and offshore centres.…”
Section: The Enemy Within: Policing the (Migrant) Crisismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the definition of Islamophobia is in flux, the available evidence shows Muslim Britons suffer deep and wide-ranging concrete social disadvantages in relation to social exclusion, violence, economic marginalisation, prejudice and discrimination (see Abbas 2019a;Allen 2020;Runnymede Trust 1997). Longstanding political and media discourses endorsing the view that multiculturalism in Britain has 'failed' have frequently been indexed to the idea that Muslim minority groups have struggled to integrate into British society (see Casey 2016).…”
Section: Setting the Context: Exclusion Stereotyping And Islamophobiamentioning
confidence: 99%