180 likes | 313 Views
From Multiculturalism to Muscular Liberalism? Muslim Participation in Contemporary Governance Therese O’Toole Daniel Nilsson DeHanas Tariq Modood Stephen Jones Nasar Meer.
E N D
From Multiculturalism to Muscular Liberalism? Muslim Participation in Contemporary Governance Therese O’Toole Daniel Nilsson DeHanas Tariq Modood Stephen Jones Nasar Meer
Faith, Diversity and State Engagement with Muslims David Cameron: 1) ‘People often say that politicians shouldn’t “do God”’… [but we do] King James Bible Speech, 12/2011 2) ‘We are a Christian country. And we should not be afraid to say so’ King James Bible Speech, 12/2011 3) ‘We have allowed the weakening of our collective identity. Under the doctrine of state multiculturalism, we have encouraged different cultures to live separate lives’ Munich speech, 2/2011 4) ‘We must make it impossible for extremists to succeed… we need a lot less of the passive tolerance of recent years and a much more active, muscular liberalism’ Munich Speech, 2/2011 A radical departure from New Labour?
MPCG Study • Religion & Society large project: Muslim Participation in Contemporary Governance (MPCG), based at Bristol University • Study of state engagement with Muslims from New Labour to the Coalition, based on: • National policy analysis, 1997-present • National interviews (40) with key policy actors • 3 local case studies in Birmingham, Leicester and Tower Hamlets • Local policy analysis • Local interviews (~60) • Participant observations
Faith under New Labour: Failing to ‘Do God’? • ‘People often say that politicians shouldn’t “do God”… [but we do]’ –Cameron, King James Bible Speech, 12/2011 • ‘We don’t do God’ Alastair Campbell/Tony Blair • ‘I have always been more interested in religion than politics’ Tony Blair, A Journey (2010) • Faith in Third Way governance (Dinham & Lowndes 2008) • Face to Face and Side by Side(2008) set out a blueprint for state engagement with faith groups
Faith under New Labour: Failing to ‘Do God’? • Focus on Islam was sometimes contested/confused: • ‘Muslim staff in one [govt] department wrote to HR saying they would like more taps for their prayer room and they got a letter back from the preventing extremism division because it was a Muslim issue’ Francis Davis, DCLG Advisor • Often argued that New Labour cast Muslims as ‘conditional citizens’ and ‘suspect communities’ (McGhee 2008; Pantazis & Pemberton 2009), • Engagement based on a limited repertoire of subject positions (moderate/good) (Birt 2006; Mamdani 2002)
Faith under New Labour: Failing to ‘Do God’? • But, there was investment in faith & Muslim civil society: • MCB was, for a time, a major interlocutor with govt • Prevent, despite pitfalls, contributed to maturation of, Muslim civil society: sometimes an unintended outcome of local/Muslim agency in disrupting Prevent from below (Birt 2009), exercising‘practices of freedom’ (Tully 2002), or ‘claiming’ governance spaces (Cornwall and Coelho 2006)
Faith under New Labour: Failing to ‘Do God’? • Other key milestones of Muslim participation in governance under New Labour: • A religion question added to 2001 Census • state funding granted to Muslim, Sikh & Hindu faith schools • Single Equality Act 2010 provides the most robust legal protection against religious discrimination in Europe • In sum: New Labour ‘did God’ – though not always consistently and with internal divisions • Differing policy logics across govt depts (Swartz 2003) • Differing practices across governance (Griggs et al 2012) • Unintended outcomes to policy decisions (Newman 2005)
Faith under the Coalition: ‘A Christian Country’? • We are a Christian country. And we should not be afraid to say so’Cameron, King James Bible Speech, 12/2011 • Signals a different approach to faith engagement • Labour meticulously balanced representatives from different faiths (Working Together 2004) for the appearance of multi-faith consensus • Labour tended to pluralise faith group access to funding and governance, even if its implicit interest was in Muslims
Faith under the Coalition: ‘A Christian Country’? • Coalition’s Near Neighbours programme is a key local-level Big Society initiative, channelling funding through the Church of England and CUF • Single-faith projects ineligible for funding • Muslim observers divided on Near Neighbours • ‘It’s a softer approach. Hopefully it will achieve the results that the Prevent agenda wanted to achieve but its more palatable.’ Ibrahim Mogra (Leicester) • ‘Do you think Muslim communities know which parish they’re part of? .…To me it’s undemocratic.’ Abdul-Rehman Malik (Tower Hamlets) • Role of the CofE: core, ‘broker’ or agent for a multi-faith establishment?
Faith under the Coalition: ‘A Christian Country’? • So far, Coalition has been clearer than New Labour in presenting a consistent view on faith, although emphasising Christian heritage • Baroness Warsi’s ‘Christian country’ remarks (‘Militant secularisation’ speech, 2/2012) • Eric Pickles’ defence of Christian council prayers • Coalition funding to faith groups is channelled through the Church via Near Neighbours (even if key Church leaders do not see it as the government does) • Bolder, yes. But fit for today’s Britain?
New Labour on Multiculturalism • ‘We have allowed the weakening of our collective identity. Under the doctrine of state multiculturalism, we have encouraged different cultures to live separate lives’ Cameron, Munich Speech, 2/2011 • Multiculturalism was important to New Labour, but… • there was also a similar emphasis on ‘shared values’ and collective identity to that of the Coalition • ‘Standing up for Britain means fighting for British values…. [including] fair play, rights and responsibilities….’ Tony Blair: Britain Speech, 3/2000 • Labour undertook a ‘civic re-balancing’ of multiculturalism(Meer and Modood 2009)
New Labour’s ‘Passive Tolerance’? • ‘We must make it impossible for extremists to succeed… we need a lot less of the passive tolerance of recent years and a much more active, muscular liberalism’ ’ Cameron, Munich Speech, 2/2011 • There was tolerance & pragmatism in New Labour’s Muslim engagement in many cases (e.g., Muslim Contact Unit / relationship with MCB) • … and a more ‘muscular’ approach in other cases: The ‘rebalancing of our relationship with Muslim organisations [will focus on those] that are taking a proactive leadership role in tackling extremism and defending our shared values.’Ruth Kelly: Speech, 10/2006
New Labour’s ‘Passive Tolerance’? • New Labour’s tolerance not ‘passive’; but perhaps ‘ambivalent’ or inconsistent due to internal disagreements and different policy logics across govt depts • ‘There was confusion… about the extent to which we should, in any sense, compromise with some of the forces which have deep, deep, deep roots and a lack of appreciation of the nature of our democratic society… I do think it was an issue where we didn’t have a coherence.’ Charles Clarke, former Home Secretary • ‘I found in the CLG, after some very rigorous examinations with officials, that there was no understood model of how Prevent was meant to work’ John Denham, MP
A Coalition Era of ‘Muscular Liberalism’? • In practice, Muscular Liberalism seems to signal four changes: • Tighter boundaries around ‘British values’ • Less faith sector funding • Reliance on ‘nudges’ for integration • Recognition of individuals, not groups
A Coalition Era of ‘Muscular Liberalism’? Tighter boundaries around British values • To be partners for the new Prevent Strategy, one must complete an extensive ‘British values’ form relating to patriotism, gender, foreign policy, etc Less faith sector funding • Much less funding is available to faith sector groups; Prevent or cohesion/ integration “How do we actually resist radicalisation without funding, without projects?” Local Prevent Coordinator, Tower Hamlets • Organisations must adapt or end their work
A Coalition Era of ‘Muscular Liberalism’? Reliance on ‘Nudges’ for Integration • In a period of funding cuts, new integration strategy relies on Big Lunches, Near Neighbours, and small initiatives to ‘nudge’ better behaviour Recognition of individuals, not groups • Key philosophical shift to individuals • No formal engagement with the MCB, and no agreed Muslim representative bodies • ‘The Conservative model on engagement… is not organisations but individuals. So it’s a nice way to meet whoever you want.’ Muslim policy actor
Unintended consequences • Despite Cameron’s anti-multiculturalism stance, Big Society may enable it to flourish as faith and cultural groups take on key state functions • A boom in faith schools (over ¼ of free schools) • ‘unintentional multiculturalism’ (Modood 2012) • No funding means groups are less beholden to state (e.g. in local implementation of Prevent)
Concluding Thoughts • Coalition rhetoric masks many continuities • Yet there are key changes: 1) Christian heritage narrative, 2) less faith sector funding / eligibility • A clean break from multiculturalism? Unlikely. • Decentred governance contingency, variation & unintended consequences • New Labour set up a scaffolding on which Muslim civil society developed; its strength once this is removed remains to be seen.