1 / 22

British Muslim Youth: An Introduction to the Topic and the Field

British Muslim Youth: An Introduction to the Topic and the Field. Sadek Hamid. Content. British Muslim Demographics Education Housing Employment Poverty Crime State of the Literature Issues Concerns. Demographics.

deepak
Download Presentation

British Muslim Youth: An Introduction to the Topic and the Field

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. British Muslim Youth: An Introduction to the Topic and the Field Sadek Hamid

  2. Content • British Muslim Demographics • Education • Housing • Employment • Poverty • Crime • State of the Literature • Issues • Concerns

  3. Demographics • Current population of between 1.6 -1.8 million people, (total population of approximately 60 million people) • Around 50% are under the age of 25 and approx 33 % under the age of 16 • Around 68% are of South Asian origin (Source: National Statistics 2001 Census)

  4. Demographics continued… • 46% of Muslims had been born in the UK • 34% of Muslim households contained more than 5 people • 38% of Muslims live in London (Source: National Statistics 2001 Census)

  5. Education • In 2004, 67 % of Indian, 48% of Bangladeshi and 45% of Pakistani pupils gained five or more grades A* to C at GCSE (or equivalent), compared with 52% of White British pupils (Source: Social Trends No. 36, 2006) • 31% of young British Muslims leave school with no qualifications compared to 15% of the total population (Source: 2001 Census)

  6. Housing • In 2001 52% of Muslim households did not own their own home  • Muslim households were the most likely to experience overcrowding. One third of Muslim households (32%) lived in overcrowded accommodation • Muslim households were the most likely to lack central heating (12%) (Source: National Statistics 2001 Census report on faith)

  7. Employment • In 2004, 28% of 16-24-year-old Muslims were unemployed.  This compares with only 11% of Christians of the same age (Source: National Statistics 2001 Census report on faith) • In 2004, a fifth of Muslims were self-employed • In 2004 almost seven in ten (69%) Muslim women of working age were economically inactive.  (Source: Social Trends No. 36, 2006)

  8. Poverty • 35 % of Muslim households have no adults in employment, (more than double the national average) (Source: 'Muslim Housing Experience‘ Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies) • Just under three-quarters of Bangladeshi and Pakistani children (73%) are living in households below the poverty line (60% of median income) (Source: DWP: Households Below Average Income 1994/5 - 2000/01)

  9. Crime • 47% of Muslim students have experienced Islamophobia  (Source: FOSIS survey, 2005) • Almost 10% of the prison populations are Muslim, two-thirds of whom are young men aged 18-30 (Source: Prison Service statistics, 2004) • Between 2001 and 2003 there was a 302% increase in 'stop and search' incidents among Asian people, compared with 118% among white people.  (Source: HO, Statistics on Race and the Criminal Justice System, 2004)

  10. Books • Young Muslims in Britain: Attitudes, Educational Needs and Policy Implications • Islam in Transition:Religion and Identity Among British Pakistani Youth • Muslim Britain: Communities Under Pressure • Infidel Within: Muslims in Britain Since 1800 • Americanisation, Globalisation and British Muslim Identity • Diaspora Youth and Ancestral Homeland: British Pakistani / Kashmiri Youth Visiting Kin in Pakistan and Kashmir • Muslim European Youth: Reproducing Ethnicity, Religion, Culture • Young, British & Muslim

  11. Reports • Muslims in Britain • Muslim Youth Speak • Bengali Transition into Adulthood • Made in Bradford) • MCB’s Muslim Youth Voices • Youth & Policy : Muslim Youth Work • Muslim Youth Helpline

  12. Magazines • Emel • Q-News • Revival • Trends

  13. Memoirs • ‘Only Half of Me’ • ‘From My Sisters Lips’ • ‘Enemy Combatant’ • ‘The Islamist’ • ‘Hizbut Tahrir: A Thinking Mans Al Qaeda’

  14. External Challenges • Over crowded housing • Educational under achievement • Unemployment • Racism • Islamophobia • Demonisation of young Muslim males • Lack of political representation

  15. Internal Challenges • Generation Gap • Cultural dislocation • Positive role model deficit • Substance addiction • Rise in crime and anti-social behaviour and related gang violence • Apathy • Fear of radicalisation and extremism

  16. Concerns According the Muslim Youth Helpline 2007 report, the top five main concerns affecting British Muslim Youth are: • Relationships • Mental Health • Religion • Offending & Rehabilitation • Sexuality & Sexual Health

  17. Also identified: • ineffective services for young Muslims • discontent over foreign policy • the difficulties of integrating when people have the dual identity of being British and a Muslim

  18. Concerns continued… • Many young Muslims feel they have an inadequate grasp of their own heritage and history, against which to balance the other influences in their lives. • Young Muslims are concerned about the way they are understood by the public (non-Muslim and Muslim) and portrayed in the media (Source: Young Muslims Speak, Peace Direct, 2006)

  19. Main Religious/Ideological Trends • Hizbut Tahrir • Salafi (apolitical & activists) • Jihadists • ‘Traditional Islam’ (activist Sufi) • Young Muslims Organisation (moderate Islamists) • Young Muslim UK (moderate Islamists) • Barelwi ( Devotional Sufi) • Deobandi/Tablighi Jamat (apolitical reformists)

  20. Is this the Face of British Muslim Youth?

  21. …or this ?

More Related