Literature Review
This literature review examines the problem of racism and bigotry that continues to exist, not just in the U.S. but all over the world. As nationalism is surging in places like the U.S., the UK, Hungary, Italy, Russia and China, the problem of race and immigration has reared its head on a global stage. Some groups have tried to rise above instances of racism—and one group in particular is the Muslim population in the West: it experienced persecution in the wake of 9/11 (Sheridan, 2006). However, many in the Muslim population tried to extend a helping hand to the West by assisting the fight against terrorism (Mantri, 2011). By looking at how a marginalized and oppressed people set aside race and dedicated themselves to the aims of the nation that accepted them a new perspective on race and a greater appreciation of how racism can be transcended may be achieved. However, to understand the issue of race globally today, it is important to examine how researchers have understood it thus far.
The context of globalization is important to understand, first of all, because globalization has changed the nature of the way identity is constructed. Globalization is defined by Robertson (2015) as “the process whereby polities, economies, institutions and actors at all levels of society become increasingly connected across national borders” (p. 4). As more and more people become connected across borders, the very idea of having borders has become to seem foolish and old-fashioned to some—particularly to young persons. Today, many young people embrace the idea of open borders (Burridge, 2010). They interact with people of different cultures every day, whether in person, using social media, leaving comments on posts on Facebook or YouTube or Twitter. Their methods of communication have made it possible to make friendships with people the world over. There are so many different ways for people to appreciate one another and to share information, all made possible by communication technology that the world does seem like one big community at this point to many people (Burridge, 2010). For this reason, the idea of stopping immigration seems an offensive idea: they do not view immigrants as bad but rather as new friends.
However, others have a much different take on immigration. They view the world as full of dangerous characters who cannot be trusted—especially people who are of a different race or ethnicity than that of the Caucasian Westerner. 9/11 really impacted many in the West in terms of how they viewed race. Suddenly Westerners felt vulnerable for the first time in a long time, and many mainstream media outlets gave them a race of people upon whom they could project their fears and newly risen hatred—the Muslim population. Abdelkraim (2002) shows that following 9/11 there was a tremendous wave of violence by Westerners against people who were believed to be Islamic: “there were well over 1,000 reported hate incidents and hate crimes, including...
References
Abdelkarim, R. Z. (2002). American Muslims and 9/11: A community looks back... and to the future. The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, 21(7), 82.
Austin, A. (2004). From Concentration Camp to Campus. Chicago, IL: University of Illinois Press.
Burridge, A. (2010). Youth on the line and the No Borders movement. Children's Geographies, 8(4), 401-411.
Haddad, Y. (2001). Muslims in U.S. politics: Recognized and integrated, or seduced and abandoned? SAIS Review, 21(2), 91-102.
Hafetz, J. (2012). Immigration and national security law: Converging approaches to state power, individual rights, and judicial review. ILSA Journal of International and Comparative Law, 18(3):628.
Inglehart, R., & Norris, P. (2003). The true clash of civilizations. Foreign Policy, 135, 63-70.
Mantri, G. (2011). Homegrown Terrorism. Harvard International Review, 33(1), 88-104.
Robertson, A. (2015). Media and politics in a globalizing world. John Wiley & Sons.
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