Introduction -- 1. Muslims in Scotland: migration, settlement and development -- 2. Surviving the crisis and resisting the stigma: the post-9/11 emergence of a Muslim consciousness -- 3. Post-ethnic Scottish Muslim identities at the nexus of nation and religion -- 4. The new Muslim community: children of Islam and Scotland -- 5. Integrated yet discriminated against: the ghost of 9/11 in everyday Muslim life -- 6. Discriminated against yet integrated: Muslim resilience and Scottish engagement with diversity -- Epilogue: towards a Scottish communitarianism, where diversity and human universals meet.
0
The experience of being a Muslim in Scotland today is shaped by the global and national post-9/11 shift in public attitudes towards Muslims, and is infused by the particular social, cultural and political Scottish ways of dealing with minorities, diversity and integration. This book explores the settlement and development of Muslim communities in Scotland, highlighting the ongoing changes in their structure and the move towards a Scottish experience of being Muslim. This experience combines a sense of civic and social belonging to Scotland with a strong religious and ideological commitment to Islam.