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  1. Call for papers.[author unknown] - 2012 - European Journal of Women's Studies 19 (2):274-275.
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  • Gender, race, religion, faith? Rethinking intersectionality in German feminisms.Beverly M. Weber - 2015 - European Journal of Women's Studies 22 (1):22-36.
    Despite the recent wave of scholarship on intersectionality, as well as a surge in feminist scholarship on Islam in German feminist studies, feminist research has yet to adequately engage with the role of religion in intersectionality. In this article the author draws on the work of the Aktionsbündnis muslimischer Frauen in Germany to explore the possibility for incorporating religion and faith into intersectional frameworks, which requires attention to women of color theorizing in German feminisms, recognition of ways in which religions (...)
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  • The Race-Religion Constellation: A European Contribution to the Critical Philosophy of Race.Anya Topolski - 2018 - Critical Philosophy of Race 6 (1):58-81.
    This article traces the hidden race-religion constellation in Europe. The term “race-religion constellation” refers to the connection or co-constitution of the categories of race and “religion.” Specifically, the term “race-religion constellation” is used to refer to the practice of classifying people into races according to categories we now associate with the term “religion.” This calls for a consideration of European history and forms of racism in Europe, such as anti-Semitism and Islamophobia. This article aims to provide an alternative non-secularized or (...)
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  • Learning racism in the absence of ‘race’.Stine H. Bang Svendsen - 2014 - European Journal of Women's Studies 21 (1):9-24.
    How do students learn about racism in the absence of ‘race’ as an explanatory concept for current social divisions? This article traces conceptual and affective negotiations of ‘race’ and racism in a Norwegian middle school classroom. Conceptual confusion about ‘race’, racism and lines of inclusion and exclusion in the nation is rife in this educational setting, where the curricular focus is on questions of immigration and integration. Treating ‘race’ as a ‘chameleon-like’ concept that adapts to the cultural context and political (...)
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  • Anti-Semitism and Islamophobia: Spectropolitics and Immigration.Esther Romeyn - 2014 - Theory, Culture and Society 31 (6):77-101.
    In the context of the Dutch immigration debate, tributes to the Holocaust and the memory of Europe’s dead Jews increasingly serve to dismantle multiculturalism as a failed paradigm and to drive a wedge between a revitalized, redeemed, color-blind, post-racial Europe and disenfranchized immigrant, minority and Muslim populations. Embedded in these invocations of the Holocaust and its moral imperatives is a ‘spectropolitics’ of tolerance, in which tolerance, staged as an essential touchstone of Dutch identity, supplies a differential norm that measures the (...)
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  • Solidarity networks that challenge racialized discourses: The case of Romani immigrant women in Spain.Ariadna Munté, Lidia Puigvert, Olga Serradell & Teresa Sordé - 2014 - European Journal of Women's Studies 21 (1):87-102.
    In the midst of the global financial crisis and in the ‘anti-race era’, Europe has witnessed a revival of deeply racialized discourses targeting the Roma, leading to new discriminatory practices and legitimating existing ones in many social domains. While westward Roma immigration has spurred these discourses, it has also favored the emergence of invisible grassroots reactions against them that need to be further analyzed. Drawing on interviews with migrant Romani women, this article aims to shed light on these unknown processes, (...)
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  • Intersectionality as a new feeling rule for young feminists: Race and feminist relations in France and Switzerland.Éléonore Lépinard & Charlène Calderaro - 2021 - European Journal of Women's Studies 28 (3):387-404.
    Black feminist theory and theorizations by feminists of colour have identified and explored emotions linked to race and racism in feminist movements, especially in the US context. Building on this literature, this article explores the changes in feminist emotional dynamics linked to race which have been brought up by the relatively recent adoption of intersectionality in feminist movements’ discourses in two European countries, France and Switzerland, which are both often described as ‘colour-blind’ contexts. Drawing on Hochschild’s concept of feeling rules, (...)
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  • Race and anti-race in Europe.Gail Lewis & Madeleine Kennedy-Macfoy - 2014 - European Journal of Women's Studies 21 (1):3-8.
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  • Is Islamophobia (Always) Racism?Anna Sophie Lauwers - 2019 - Critical Philosophy of Race 7 (2):306-332.
    Recent scholarship increasingly defines Islamophobia as a form of racism. The possibility that Islamophobia could also manifest itself as religious or cultural bigotry is generally overlooked. This article argues that although anti-Islam bigotry is intertwined with anti-Muslim racism, the two are conceptually distinct. Making this distinction allows us to better analyze, unmask, and critically assess Islamophobia. The article conceptually explores the similarities and differences between anti-Muslim racism and anti-Islam bigotry. It finds that although anti-Islam bigotry implies a prejudicial rejection of (...)
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  • Germany's silence: Testimonial injustice in the NSU investigation and willful ignorance in the NSU trial.Hilkje Charlotte Hänel - 2023 - Constellations.
    We can currently see the formation of new nationalist and racist parties or tendencies within established parties to lean towards right-wing politics within many European countries; from the Alternative für Deutschland in Germany, the Partij voor de Vrijheid (PVV) in the Netherlands, Lega Nord or Lega in Italia, Vox in Spain, the Freiheitliche Partei Österreichs, Front National in France, the Sverigedemokraterna in Sweden, Fidesz in Hungary, and Golden Dawn in Greece, to name only a few. At the same time, there (...)
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  • Schwarzes Mittelmeer, weißes Europa.Jeanette Ehrmann - 2021 - Zeitschrift für Praktische Philosophie 8 (1).
    Zusammenfassung: Die Passage über das Mittelmeer ist in den letzten Jahren zu einer der tödlichsten Migrationsrouten der Welt geworden. Während die Mitgliedsstaaten der Europäischen Union gegen die sogenannte „Flüchtlingskrise“ eine militärische und diskursive Fluchtabwehrpolitik betreiben und die Seenotrettung geflüchteter Menschen aussetzen und kriminalisieren, begreifen normative politische Theorien der Migration Fluchtbewegungen als ein politisches oder moralisches Problem sowie als Krise für etablierte Demokratien. Gegen den Topos der „Flüchtlingskrise“ und die implizite Normalisierung von Grenzen in einem Großteil gegenwärtiger politiktheoretischer Debatten zu Migration (...)
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  • On Cologne: Gender, migration and unacknowledged racisms in Germany.Christiane Carri & Stefanie C. Boulila - 2017 - European Journal of Women's Studies 24 (3):286-293.
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  • Étienne Balibar on the dialectic of universal citizenship.Christiaan Boonen - 2021 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 48 (6):904-933.
    Philosophy & Social Criticism, Volume 48, Issue 6, Page 904-933, July 2022. In this article, I reconstruct Étienne Balibar’s work against the background of the debate on modern universal citizenship. I argue that universal citizenship is neither fundamentally emancipatory nor fundamentally oppressive but is rather both. In order to defend this position, I build on Balibar’s concept of the “citizen subject.” First, I parse this concept, showing how it allows us to think about the contradictions of modern universal citizenship. In (...)
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  • Étienne Balibar on the dialectic of universal citizenship.Christiaan Boonen - 2022 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 48 (6):904-933.
    In this article, I reconstruct Étienne Balibar’s work against the background of the debate on modern universal citizenship. I argue that universal citizenship is neither fundamentally emancipatory nor fundamentally oppressive but is rather both. In order to defend this position, I build on Balibar’s concept of the “citizen subject.” First, I parse this concept, showing how it allows us to think about the contradictions of modern universal citizenship. In the second section, I elucidate its temporal logic and show how it (...)
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  • Racism in Europe: Characteristics and Intersections With Other Social Categories.Elena Ball, Melanie C. Steffens & Claudia Niedlich - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Concerning race and its intertwinements with gender, sexual orientation, class, accents, or ability there is a scarcity of social psychological research in Europe. With an intersectional approach studying racism in Europe it is possible to detect specific experiences of discrimination. The prevalent understanding of European racism is connected to migration from the former colonies to the European metropoles and the post-Second-World-War immigration of ‘guest workers.’ Thus, the focus of this research is on work-related discrimination. Against the background of a short (...)
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