Muslim Converts in Britain and Beyond: Transitions and Transformations

Muslim Converts in Britain and Beyond: Transitions and Transformations

About The Event

Muslim Converts in Britain and Beyond: Transitions and Transformations

Call for Papers
Date:
January 09, 2025
Venue:
Cardiff University, United Kingdom
Abstract Submission Deadline:
October 31, 2024

The Islam-UK Centre, Cardiff University & MBRN (Muslims in Britain Research Network) invite submissions for academic papers and professional contributions to a one-day conference about Muslim converts in Europe.  This interdisciplinary conference is open to academic scholars, non-academic professionals and practitioners, and members of religious communities.

They will showcase contemporary research and practice in relation to Muslim converts in Britain, and identify topics for future research and practice by addressing the following questions:

  1. What impact have British Muslim converts had on Muslim communities and wider British society?
  2. What resources do British Muslim converts use to create progress and change in their own lives, and more widely?
  3. What are the challenges and needs faced by British Muslim converts in the contemporary context, and how can research help to identify and address these?

State of Knowledge

Over the past 20 years, conversion to Islam has captured the attention of academic scholars as well as practitioners and policy-makers from the criminal justice system, health and social care, religion professionals, and the media. In many European societies, conversion can be seen as controversial due to anti-Muslim prejudice and Islamophobia. For converts themselves, whilst conversion can be a joyous and fulfilling experience, it can also create tensions in their inter-personal relationships and in the wider public sphere, including in education and the workplace (Vroon 2014).

Research in Britain, and across Europe, has tended to focus on conversion experiences and the challenges Muslim converts can encounter (Alyedreessy 2016; Brice 2010). Specifically, conversion has been analyzed in relation to: ethnicity, race and racialization (Moosavi 2015; Piela & Krotofil 2023); gender and sexuality (Suleiman 2013, 2016; Van Nieuwkerk 2006); and, incarceration and terrorism/counter-terrorism (Flower 2013; Mullins 2015).

Conversion to Islam in Europe is most often characterized as a sudden and radical move to a ‘foreign’ religion. In contrast to this popular characterisation, research shows that conversion is a longer transformative process, motivated by a spiritual quest involving cumulative knowledge acquisition and a gradual shift in identity boundaries (Al-Qwidi 2002; Midden 2023). Scholarly attention has also been paid to historical evidence of Britain’s early encounters with Muslims and conversion, to counter such narratives (Ansari 2004; Gilliat-Ray 2010). Furthermore, the extent to which converts are shaping a specifically British or European Islam has been conceptualised as the ‘indigenisation’ of Islam (Zebiri 2014).

Convert Muslims have been described as ‘ambassadors of Islam’ in Europe (Van Es 2017). From this perspective, White Muslim converts can act as ‘bridges’ between born Muslims from minority backgrounds and non-Muslim majority populations (Roald 2004; Suleiman 2013). However, convert Muslim communities are ethnically diverse and a focus on whiteness can lead to further marginalization of Muslim converts of other ethnic groups in both research and the practice of ‘convert care’ (Birt 2022). It is also important to note that converts’ positionality is complicated by colonial and historical legacies (Gallonier 2015).

More recently, scholarly interest in conversion has shifted to examine life (long) after conversion. The ‘Transformational: Muslim Converts in British Life’ is one such study, being conducted at the Islam-UK Centre Centre in collaboration with the Convert Muslim Foundation. This study aims to document and conceptualise the impact of leadership and change making activities of Muslim converts in Britain.

Conference Themes

  • Leadership and change making among Muslim converts
  • Second or third generation of converts
  • Intercultural integration
  • Conversion and Islamophobia
  • Conversion and social activism
  • Converts’ politics
  • Converts and (changing) religious authority
  • Converts’ long-term spiritual journeys
  • Evolved convert organizations
  • Gender
  • ‘Race’, ethnicity and other dimensions of converts’ diversity
  • (Media) narratives on conversion
  • Conversion and da‘wah cultures
  • Other themes relevant to the conference questions

Submission Guidelines

Please submit your abstract or description of your 15-minute presentation (300 words) addressing one or more of the conference questions, along with a short bio (50 words) using this online form:  https://forms.office.com/e/bwKkwzHqDB

This call for papers will close on 31st October 2024.

You will be notified of acceptance by mid-November 2024.

Conference Organizers

Centre for the Study of Islam in the UK: Sophie Gilliat-Ray and Asma Khan

Muslims in Britain Research Network:  Sariya Cheruvallil-ContractorLaura Mora, Qudra Goodall.

 

Source: The Muslims in Britain Research Network (MBRN)

  • Cost: Free
  • Total Slot: 0
  • Booked Slot: 0

Location

Cardiff University

Cardiff CF10 3AT, United Kingdom

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