Chapter 1: From Cosmopolitanism to Pluralism and Return, Erich
Kolig
Chapter 2: Western European Muslims between Islamophobia and
Radicalisation, Tahir Abbas
Chapter 3: Western Mosque and Muslim integration: Identity Crisis
and Resolution, Christopher Evan Longhurst
Chapter 4: The Spectre of Parallel Societies and Social
Disintegration, Erich Kolig
Chapter 5: Muslims “in” New Zealand or “of” New Zealand?, William
Shepard
Chapter 6: Islam’s History and Integration in New Zealand’s
Society: A Convert’s View, Abdullah Martin Drury
Chapter 7: Integrating through Screen: the Muslim Diaspora in New
Zealand, Arezou Zalipour
Chapter 8: Multiculturalism, Muslim Radicalism, and the Problematic
of Muslim Integration in Australia, Jan Ali
Chapter 9: Creating Ethical Subjects? The Role of the Turkish State
in Integrating Muslims in Australia, Christopher Houston and Banu
Senay
Chapter 10: Teaching and Learning Halal Sex: Discussing Contrasting
Values among Muslim among Young Adults in Australia, Lisa Siobhan
Irving
Chapter 11: Islamic Inheritance and Sharia Wills: the Recognition
of Muslim Inheritance Traditions in Australia, Malcolm Voyce, Selda
Dagestanli, Adam Possamai, Joshua Roose, Bryan Turner, Lisa
Worthington
12. Islamic Exceptionalism: Do the Religious and Legal Imperatives
of Islam Necessitate Special Regimes in Secular Nations?, Ann Black
Erich Kolig is honorary fellow in religion at Otago University.
Malcolm Voyce is associate professor of law at Macquarie
University.
Kolig and Voyce have put together a stimulating set of reflections,
studies, and analyses of one of today's most fraught challenges.
The age of benign multiculturalism—that has subsumed real
differentiation and regarded cultural and religious diversity as
but a garnish to the dominant culture—is now challenged by the
reality of accommodating deep diversity. How the Antipodes cope
with Muslims and Islamic diversities is of significant interest,
with global resonance.
*Douglas Pratt, University of Waikato*
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