Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
[T]he book offers some apprehensions of Islam and Muslims in Denmark. Readers will get insights into the history of Muslim settlement in the country and learn some things about the process of the institutionalization of Islam. The book also mediates a feeling of how a specific type of multiculturalist Danish scholars and activists position themselves in the Danish debate about Muslim immigration and Islam. * ID: International Dialogue, A Multidisciplinary Journal of World Affairs *
The 2006 responses to Danish cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad thrust Islam in Denmark into the news, but Danes and immigrant Muslims had been interacting for many years prior to this event. This volume is the first in-depth treatment of Muslims and Islam in Denmark, with a fine combination of ethnographic, historical, political, and demographic perspectives. We learn about the lived realities of Muslims and non-Muslims in schools, neighborhoods, and religious settings. Denmark's particular self-perception as a mono-cultural state makes the Danish experience importantly different from those in France, Germany, and Britain, and adds in important ways to our overall understanding of Islam in Europe. -- John R. Bowen, Washington University in St. Louis
Jørgen S. Nielsen, an internationally-renowned scholar on Islam, has in collaboration with fifteen other scholars produced a brilliantly comprehensive book on all aspects of the integration of Islam and Muslims into Danish society. Danes who used to be regarded as among the most tolerant people in Europe have in recent years acquired a reputation for anti-Muslim sentiments. This book tells a more nuanced story about a fifty-year long history of acculturation and gradual accommodation to a pluralist society. The chapters range from the history of Danish converts and not-in-my-backyard resistance to mosque building to fertility rates and an ethnographic study of why Muslim youths join extremist groups. The contributors who are drawn from all fields of the social sciences and include two imams present their research on Danish Muslims grounded in the theories and facts of comparative migration research. The book will appeal to readers who want to know what the real story is about the Danish reaction to the presence of Muslims in their midst as well as to those interested in migration studies. -- Jytte Klausen, Lawrence A. Wien Professor of International Cooperation, Brandeis University
Denmark in recent years has become an epicenter of the debate on Islam and Muslims in Europe. Islam in Denmark: The Challenge of Diversity demonstrates that it is also producing some of the best scholarship on the topic. Nielsen's edited volume is the definitive multidisciplinary study of Islam in Denmark. -- Peter Mandaville, author of Global Political Islam

Table of Contents
Preface Chapter 1: Setting the Scene (Jørgen S. Nielsen) Part One: National Perspectives Chapter 2: Denmark, Islam and Muslims – Socio-Economic Dynamics and the Art of Becoming (Jørgen Bæk Simonsen) Chapter 3: Muslims in Denmark - a Critical Evaluation of Estimation (Brian Arly Jacobsen) Chapter 4: Religion and State: Recognition of Islam and Related Legislation (Lisbet Christoffersen) Chapter 5: Mosques and Organizations (Lene Kühle) Part Two: Particular Perspectives Chapter 6: Nørrebro and ”Muslimness”: A Neighborhood Caught Between National Mythscapes and Local Engagement (Garbi Schmidt) Chapter 7: How Did ‘the Muslim Pupil’ Become Muslim? Danish State Schooling and 'the Migrant Pupils' since the 1970s (Mette Buchardt) Chapter 8: Gender as a Tool in Danish Debates about Muslims (Rikke Andreassen) Chapter 9: Conversion to Islam in Denmark (Tina Jensen and Kate Østergaard) Chapter 10: Muslims as a Danish Security Issue (Mona Kanwal Sheikh and Manni Crone) Part Three: Perspectives on the Ground Chapter 11: ‘To be Something’ – the Role of Religion in the Formation of Protest Identity among Ethnic Minority Youth (Lissi Rasmussen) Chapter 12: Counseling in the Health Service (Naveed Baig) Chapter 13: Interreligious Relations (Safet Bektovic) Chapter 14: Towards a European Understanding of Islam (Abdul Wahid Pedersen)

Islam in Denmark

    Product form

    £91.80

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £102.00 – you save £10.20 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    Out of stock


      View other formats and editions of Islam in Denmark by

      Publisher: Rlpg/Galleys
      Publication Date: 12/21/2011 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739150924, 978-0739150924
      ISBN10: 0739150928

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      [T]he book offers some apprehensions of Islam and Muslims in Denmark. Readers will get insights into the history of Muslim settlement in the country and learn some things about the process of the institutionalization of Islam. The book also mediates a feeling of how a specific type of multiculturalist Danish scholars and activists position themselves in the Danish debate about Muslim immigration and Islam. * ID: International Dialogue, A Multidisciplinary Journal of World Affairs *
      The 2006 responses to Danish cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad thrust Islam in Denmark into the news, but Danes and immigrant Muslims had been interacting for many years prior to this event. This volume is the first in-depth treatment of Muslims and Islam in Denmark, with a fine combination of ethnographic, historical, political, and demographic perspectives. We learn about the lived realities of Muslims and non-Muslims in schools, neighborhoods, and religious settings. Denmark's particular self-perception as a mono-cultural state makes the Danish experience importantly different from those in France, Germany, and Britain, and adds in important ways to our overall understanding of Islam in Europe. -- John R. Bowen, Washington University in St. Louis
      Jørgen S. Nielsen, an internationally-renowned scholar on Islam, has in collaboration with fifteen other scholars produced a brilliantly comprehensive book on all aspects of the integration of Islam and Muslims into Danish society. Danes who used to be regarded as among the most tolerant people in Europe have in recent years acquired a reputation for anti-Muslim sentiments. This book tells a more nuanced story about a fifty-year long history of acculturation and gradual accommodation to a pluralist society. The chapters range from the history of Danish converts and not-in-my-backyard resistance to mosque building to fertility rates and an ethnographic study of why Muslim youths join extremist groups. The contributors who are drawn from all fields of the social sciences and include two imams present their research on Danish Muslims grounded in the theories and facts of comparative migration research. The book will appeal to readers who want to know what the real story is about the Danish reaction to the presence of Muslims in their midst as well as to those interested in migration studies. -- Jytte Klausen, Lawrence A. Wien Professor of International Cooperation, Brandeis University
      Denmark in recent years has become an epicenter of the debate on Islam and Muslims in Europe. Islam in Denmark: The Challenge of Diversity demonstrates that it is also producing some of the best scholarship on the topic. Nielsen's edited volume is the definitive multidisciplinary study of Islam in Denmark. -- Peter Mandaville, author of Global Political Islam

      Table of Contents
      Preface Chapter 1: Setting the Scene (Jørgen S. Nielsen) Part One: National Perspectives Chapter 2: Denmark, Islam and Muslims – Socio-Economic Dynamics and the Art of Becoming (Jørgen Bæk Simonsen) Chapter 3: Muslims in Denmark - a Critical Evaluation of Estimation (Brian Arly Jacobsen) Chapter 4: Religion and State: Recognition of Islam and Related Legislation (Lisbet Christoffersen) Chapter 5: Mosques and Organizations (Lene Kühle) Part Two: Particular Perspectives Chapter 6: Nørrebro and ”Muslimness”: A Neighborhood Caught Between National Mythscapes and Local Engagement (Garbi Schmidt) Chapter 7: How Did ‘the Muslim Pupil’ Become Muslim? Danish State Schooling and 'the Migrant Pupils' since the 1970s (Mette Buchardt) Chapter 8: Gender as a Tool in Danish Debates about Muslims (Rikke Andreassen) Chapter 9: Conversion to Islam in Denmark (Tina Jensen and Kate Østergaard) Chapter 10: Muslims as a Danish Security Issue (Mona Kanwal Sheikh and Manni Crone) Part Three: Perspectives on the Ground Chapter 11: ‘To be Something’ – the Role of Religion in the Formation of Protest Identity among Ethnic Minority Youth (Lissi Rasmussen) Chapter 12: Counseling in the Health Service (Naveed Baig) Chapter 13: Interreligious Relations (Safet Bektovic) Chapter 14: Towards a European Understanding of Islam (Abdul Wahid Pedersen)

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account