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  1. Beyond Herberg: An Islamic Perspective On Religious Pluralism In The Usa After 9/11.Hajer Ben Hadj Salem - 2005 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 4 (11):3-16.
    The history of America’s openness to immigration from diverse regions has advanced the course of religious pluralism. Many religious groups existed in America, yet only a few were publicly significant in advancing the course of pluralism from tolerance of differences to inclusion and participation. Their public significance was contingent upon their ability to help develop models of religious pluralism. Such models reflect structures that evolved as a result of attempts to formulate responses to diversity and to assert that there is (...)
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  • Interpreting Gender in Islam: A Case Study of Immigrant Muslim Women in Oslo, Norway.Line Nyhagen Predelli - 2004 - Gender and Society 18 (4):473-493.
    This article explores variation in how immigrant Muslim women in Oslo, Norway, interpret and practice gender relations within the framework of Islam. Religion, family, and work are important sites for the formation, negotiation, and change of gender relations. The article therefore discusses the views and experiences of immigrant Muslim women concerning wife-husband relations and participation in the labor market. Four analytical types of views toward gender relations are introduced, and the variation in gender practices and views found among Muslim women (...)
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  • Self‐making in exile: Moral emplacement by syrian refugee women in Jordan.Sarah A. Tobin - 2020 - Journal of Religious Ethics 48 (4):664-687.
    This article brings an anthropology of ethics to bear on a case of forced migration and displacement among Syrian refugee women in Jordan. The case reveals how projects of Islamic self‐making in displacement become “emplacement” processes within the new state‐mediated context. Syrian women in Jordan engage in Islamic self‐making as part of their wider emplacement practices in two primary ways: first, operating more publicly in the material world through Islamically‐inspired actions and rituals than in Syria. Second, utilizing narratives of Islamic (...)
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  • Religion, Citizenship and Participation: A Case Study of Immigrant Muslim Women in Norwegian Mosques.Line Nyhagen Predelli - 2008 - European Journal of Women's Studies 15 (3):241-260.
    This article analyses the increasing participation of Muslim women in mosques in Norway in light of current discourses on citizenship, gender and migration. It discusses how various processes in the mosques can be interpreted as contradictory and complex by sometimes increasing the participation of women and promoting liberation, while at other times constraining women'ss activities through various forms of discipline and control. Women are vital for the building of religious institutions among Muslim immigrant communities, and they are slowly achieving more (...)
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