Society
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Interview with Naika Foroutan on Germany's Islam Conference
Encouraging developments
Germany's Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière has announced that the German Islam Conference will no longer concern itself with security issues. For sociologist Naika Foroutan of Berlin's Humboldt University, this is a positive sign. At last, the conference will be able to concentrate on ensuring religious equality for Muslims in Germany. Claudia Mende spoke to her
By Claudia Mende -
Interview with Kerem Öktem
Farewell to the "Islamic Vatican"?
Diyanet, Turkey's state-run Directorate General for Religious Affairs, is often referred to as a kind of Islamic "mini-Vatican". The Ankara-based authority seeks to shape the religious lives of Turkish Muslims living in Western Europe. In Germany, the Turkish Islamic Union for Religious Affairs (DITIB), a federation of almost 900 mosque communities, is closely allied with Diyanet. Claudia Mende asked German scholar Kerem Öktem of St Anthony's College Oxford to what extent Ankara influences debates about religious matters in Germany
By Claudia Mende -
Integration in Germany
Finally growing up
Attitudes and approaches to integration in Germany have changed a lot over the past 20 years. During this period, Germany has gone from a denial that it is a country of immigration to a concerted effort to improve integration. Aladin El-Mafaalani takes a closer look at what has changed
By Aladin El-Mafaalani -
Health and immigration in Germany
Language barriers to psychotherapy for immigrants
Language is a crucial part of therapy when treating psychological disorders. Yet how is therapy possible when the therapist and the patient don't even speak the same language? This is often a huge problem for immigrants. Marcus Lütticke has the details
By Marcus Lütticke -
Migration in Morocco
From emigration to immigration
For decades, migration in Morocco flowed in one direction: towards Europe. Now, however, while fewer and fewer Moroccans are leaving the country, immigration is on the rise. For the first time, illegal immigrants living in the country are to be issued with residence papers. By Beat Stauffer
By Beat Stauffer -
Changing the orientation of Germany's Islam Conference
New agenda, same old faces
Since the row that erupted at last year's Islam Conference, dialogue between the German state and its Muslim residents has faltered. Now, the new interior minister, Thomas de Maizière, wants to get things moving again by changing the forum's orientation. But what can the German Islam Conference realistically hope to achieve in the future? By Ulrike Hummel
By Ulrike Hummel -
Book review: Klaus J. Bade on Thilo Sarrazin
Forget Sarrazin!
In 2010, the German politician and former member of the board of the Bundesbank Thilo Sarrazin, caused a nationwide uproar with his hugely controversial theories on intelligence, class, race, immigration and multiculturalism. The prominent migration specialist Klaus J. Bade has now written a book on the ensuing debate. According to Andreas Pflitsch, Bade's analysis is thorough, but he completely misses the essence of the matter
By Andreas Pflitsch -
Interview with the sociologist of religion Detlef Pollack
"Germans are much less tolerant"
The Archbishop of Cologne recently drew distinctions between the value of Christian and Muslim families in Germany. For Detlef Pollack, this is not an expression of Islamophobia, but an example of German reservations. Stefan Dege spoke to the sociologist of religion
By Stefan Dege -
Dispute about Prof Mouhanad Khorchide
A conflict of many layers
The dispute about Mouhanad Khorchide, director of the Centre for Islamic Theology at the University of Münster, is heating up. Although the conflict is ostensibly about the "correct" interpretation of Islam, it is also an attempt by the Islamic associations in Germany to make a show of strength to politicians. The dispute has dire consequences for the discipline of Islamic theology, which is still in its infancy in Germany. By Canan Topçu
By Canan Topçu -
Interview with the Lebanese activist Rima Najdi
Provocation for peace
Dressed as a suicide bomber with a fake explosive belt, "Madame Bomba" roamed the streets of Beirut ... Her aim in doing so was to provoke a reaction in those that saw her and to protest against the on-going violence in Lebanon. But who is "Madame Bomba"? Juliane Metzker spoke to Rima Najdi, the Lebanese activist behind the provocative performance
By Juliane Metzker -
Global history
Playing with the relativity of perspectives
A new six-volume work entitled "A History of the World" is the high point of a historiographical boom in the discipline known as "global history". The project attempts to overcome the eurocentrism of traditional writings of history. By Andreas Pflitsch
By Andreas Pflitsch -
UNRWA photo exhibition: "The Long Journey"
The long journey into uncertainty
The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) recently opened a photo and video exhibition on the history of Palestinian refugees since 1948 in East Jerusalem. By Joseph Croitoru
By Joseph Croitoru
Most read articles
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German academia
When neutrality becomes complicity
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Samia Mehrez's "The Many Lives of Ibrahim Nagui"
Reframing a divided legacy
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"Carmen" on the Egyptian stage
Rewritten to fit the patriarchal script
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Iran at war
The scapegoating of Afghan refugees
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The "New Middle East"
Pax Israelia or bellum aeternum?
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Ismail Küpeli's "Graue Wölfe"
A danger left unchecked