Civil Rights in Wartime: The Post-9/11 Sikh Experience

Couverture
Routledge, 23 mai 2016 - 232 pages
In the days, months, and now years following the events of September 11th, 2001, discrimination against the Sikh community in America has escalated sharply, due in part to a populace that often confuses Sikhs, compelled by their faith to wear turbans, with the Muslim extremists responsible for the devastating terrorist attacks. Although Sikhs have since mobilized to spread awareness and condemn violence against themselves and Muslims, there has been a conspicuous absence of academic literature to aid scholars and commentators in understanding the effect of the backlash on the Sikh community. This volume provides a unique window onto this particular minority group's experience in an increasingly hostile climate, and offers a sharp analysis of the legal battles fought by Sikhs in post-9/11 America. In doing so, it adds a new chapter to the ongoing national story of the difficulties minority groups have faced in protecting their civil liberties in times of war.
 

Table des matières

Introduction
1
Part I Sikhism and the Sikh Turban
7
Part II Targeting the Sikh Turban
59
Part III Marginalization of the Sikh Turban
107
Part IV The Response to the Post911 Climate
151
Conclusion
203
Index
209
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À propos de l'auteur (2016)

Dawinder S. Sidhu is Founding Director of the Discrimination and National Security Initiative, Pluralism Project, at Harvard University, and an attorney whose practice focuses on individual rights and national security.

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