London Youth, Religion, and Politics
Engagement and Activism from Brixton to Brick Lane
Daniel Nilsson DeHanas
Reviews and Awards
"One of DeHanas'smain strengths is the way in which the depth of his fieldwork resonates throughout the volume, providing the reader with much richness and detail." -- Emily Winter, Lancaster University, Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations
"this is a very timely and worthwhile book that successfully illustrates the complex struggles of second-generation youth -- regardless of ethnicity and religion -- showing that they are as active as their peers and finally, that in some contexts, religion plays a role in the articulation of (political) identities and modes of civic participation." -- Petra Kuppinger, Reading Religion
"The author adeptly goes into beautiful narrative detail of his interactions during ethnographic observation with local community people and members of churches and mosques. It is certainly thought-provoking when DeHanas emphasizes that mosques focus on the 'communal' impact of the individual, while churches tend to focus on the more individualistic, subjective self."--Asma Mustafa, Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion
"This is an interesting, well-written, and engaging volume with some intriguing key findings. One of DeHanas's main strengths is the way in which the depth of his fieldwork resonates throughout the volume, providing the reader with much richness and detail."--Emily Winter, Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations
"This book is outstanding in that it focuses on one city, London, and compares the political and social evolution of second-generation British youth of different migrant origins: British Muslim Bangladeshis, British Christian Jamaicans, and nonreligious youth. It is original because no other book - to my knowledge - to date has presented such a comparative study and comprehensive findings on the integration process of youth from different immigrant ethnic backgrounds."--Moha Ennaji, Digest of Middle East Studies
"Apart from American classics such as Will Herberg's Protestant-Catholic-Jew (1955) religion is often missing from research on immigration, ethnicity and identity. One valuable aspect of this study is that religion plays a central role in his analysis and conclusions, in which black Jamaicans often have a connection to evangelical Protestantism, especially Pentecostalism, and Bengalis invariably come from families in which Islam is the key component of culture and identity. Thus DeHanas seeks to weigh the influences of race, ethnicity, religion and citizenship in the formation of identity."--Bryan S. Turner, British Journal of Sociology
"DeHanas has provided a valuable, empirically rich text that is theoretically informed and contributes to increasing our understanding of diversity, integration and to what degree different forms of Christianity and Islam influence the daily lives of young people in a global city. This comparative approach is a useful corrective to the constant exceptionalisation of British Muslim young people and offers a nuanced enquiry into types of British African-Caribbean youth religiosity."--Sadek Hamid, LSE Review of Books
"This dense and carefully argued book provides a wealth of information about the implications of 'decultured' Islam or 'de-ethnicized' evangelicalism for the youth, especially vis-à-vis the integration of second-generation immigrants as engaged citizens. . . . Students of migration, religion, and race will greatly benefit from its insight-in particular, its reflection on how race, ethnicity, and religion intersect for immigrants' integration."--Soulit Chacko, International Migration Review
"Drawing on a much-needed comparative study, this book provides a fascinating insight into the civic integration and political participation of British Muslim, Christian and non-religious young people in a changing Britain."-- John Eade, Professor of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Roehampton
"Daniel Nilsson DeHanas' empirically driven analysis should be read, marked, learned and inwardly digested by all those who care about our democratic future and the place of second-generation migrants in this. I commend it warmly."-- Grace Davie, Professor Emeritus in Sociology, University of Exeter