Cover image for Muslim youth : challenges, opportunities and expectations
Title:
Muslim youth : challenges, opportunities and expectations
Publication Information:
London ; New York, N.Y. : Continuum International Pub. Group, 2012
Physical Description:
xiv, 315 p. ; 23 cm.
ISBN:
9781441122995

9781441119872

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35000000002843 BP188.18.Y68 M87 2012 Open Access Book Book
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30000010335429 BP188.18.Y68 M87 2012 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Many Muslim societies, regardless of location, are displaying a 'youth bulge', where more than half their populations are under the age of 25. An increasingly globalized western culture is rapidly eroding 'traditional' ideas about society, from the family to the state. At the same time, there is a view that rampant materialism is creating a culture of spiritual emptiness in which demoralization and pessimism easily find root. For young Muslims these challenges may be compounded by a growing sense of alienation as they face competing ideologies and divergent lifestyles.



Muslim youth are often idealized as the 'future of Islam' or stigmatized as rebelling against their parental values and suffering 'identity crises'. These experiences can produce both positive and negative reactions, from intellectual engagement and increasing spiritual maturity to emotional rejectionism, narrow identity politics and violent extremism. This book addresses many of the central issues currently facing young Muslims in both localized and globalized contexts through engaging with the work of academics, youth work practitioners and those working in non-governmental organizations and civic institutions.


Author Notes

Mohammad Siddique Seddon is Assistant Director of the Centre for Faith and Public Policy and Lecturer in Islamic and Religious Studies at the Department of Theology and Religious Studies, University of Chester, UK.
Fauzia Ahmad is Research Fellow at the Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations at the Aga Khan University (UK) and an Honorary Research Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship at Bristol University, UK.


Table of Contents

Contributors and Editors
Acknowledgements
Foreword
1 IntroductionMohammad S. Seddon and Fauzia Ahmad
Part I Muslim Youth: Negotiating Local and Global Contexts
2 The Phenomenon of Serial Nihilism among British Muslim Youth of Bradford, EnglandSaeed A. Khan
3 An Analysis of the Factors that Pave the Way for the Radicalization of British Muslim Youth from a Comparative PerspectiveIhsan Yilmaz
Part II Identity and Belonging
4 Muslim Migrant Youth: Descriptive Factors related to Acculturation and Psychosocial AdaptationM. Taqi Tirmazi and Altaf Husain and Fatima Mirza and Tasanee R. Walsh
5 Religion, Language or Ethnicity? Hybridized Identity among the Ismaili Youth of Afghanistan in GermanyYahia Baiza
6 Turning to my ReligionMuhammad G Khan
Part III Education and New Media
7 â€~Growing Up Under Lockdown' or â€~Educational Pioneers'? Challenging Stereotypes of British Muslim Women in Higher EducationFauzia Ahmad
8 Muslim Youth at University: a Critical Examination of the British Higher Education ExperienceSeyfeddin Kara
9 Muslim Youth and Citizenship Education: Idealism, Islam and Prospects for Successful Citizenship EducationNader Al-Refai and Christopher Bagley
Part IV Methodologies of Engaging
10 Activity and Alterity: Youth Work with Muslim â€~Girls'Gill Cressey
11 Youth Work and Islam: A Growing Tradition?Brian Belton
12 Training Muslim Youth to be â€~Khateebs'Arif Fitzsimon
13 Engaging with Young Muslims: Some Paradigms from the Qur'an and SunnahMohammad S. Seddon
Websites, Addresses and Contacts of Prominent Agencies, Institutions and Organisations Dedicated to Muslim Youth Work
Notes
Bibliography
Index