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A nossa Europa
Início > Educação & Sociedade > A Nossa Europa

Este projeto constitui a resposta do British Council a um dos maiores desafios culturais com que a Europa se confronta atualmente - a crescente desconfiança entre as comunidades muçulmanas e a sociedade europeia como um todo. A Nossa Europa procura encontrar pontos em comum e construir valores, perpectivas e comportamentos partilhados que se baseiam em confiança e respeito mútuos. Em particular, o projeto procura um reconhececimento da contribuição das comunidades e culturas islâmicas - tanto no passado como no presente - na formação da civilização e sociedade europeia contemporânea. Isto significa reconhecer a riqueza e a diversidade da nossa cultura e sociedade e em simultâneo utilizar este reconhecimento para construir uma visão mais inclusiva do continente que todos partilhamos.

Para saber mais sobre o projeto visite
www.oursharedeurope.org
ou contacte
projects.enquiries@pt.britishcouncil.org
T 213 214 507

Civilizações em conflito ou em aliança?
Ao abrigo do projeto “Our Shared Europe – A Nossa Europa Comum”, o British Council Portugal colaborou com a SIC Notícias e o seu programa “Sociedade das Nações”. O resultado foi um programa que aborda o principal tema do projeto: um melhor entendimento dos contributos feitos pelas comunidades islâmicas para a construção da cultura e da sociedade europeias. Aqui pode ver um extrato desse programa. Se desejar ver mais, por favor contacte Fátima Dias.

Past events

At the Margins of Europe?
Muslims in Finland, Ireland and Portugal
 
Presented by: MEL-net (ICS-UL) and Our Shared Europe (British Council) in cooperation with the Gulbenkian Foundation (Lisbon) and the research projects “The Governance of Transnational Islam” (University of Helsinki, Finland) and “IRCHSS-Project History of Islam in Ireland” (University College Cork, Ireland)
Organisation by: Nina Clara Tiesler (ICS-UL), José Mapril (CRIA) and AbdoolKarim Vakil (King’s College London)
Date: 17-18 March 2011
Venue: Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon (ICS-UL)
 

Importance of the meeting
The Portugal-based international academic Research Network MEL-net (Muçulmanos em Espaços Lusófonos; Muslims in Portuguese Speaking Areas, hostet at ICS-UL) and the initiative “Our Shared Europe” (British Council) share as one of their major objectives to provide a space for academic and public debate on current issues which relate to Muslims in Europe. After having realized the workshop and symposium on Muslims in Europe and Islamopobia in April 2010, this second joint mission of international scope, entitled At the Margins of Europe? Muslims in Finland, Ireland and Portugal will further contribute to this goal at integrating new collaboration partners, as the Lisbon-based Gulbenkian Foundation and the above named research projects hosted at the departments of the Study of Religion of the University of Helsinki and the Irish University College Cork.

Apart from eleven expert speakers (nine from abroad, two Portugal based), the event can count on two-three pioneering and leading authors in the field of Muslims in Europe as discussants.

Keywords
Muslims, Europe, Marginal Countries, State of the Art, Comparative insights and particularities

Summary
Research interest and state of the art which relate to Muslim communities in present-day Europe is usually more advanced in those countries which count on a numerically stronger and historically slightly earlier established Muslim presence, such as France, Britain and Germany, countries which also hold a more prominent position in the EU. This workshop presents an important opportunity to gain comparative insights in the societal, legal and historical experience of and with Muslim communities in more marginal European countries, such as Finland, Ireland and Portugal. For all three countries, immigration at large is a historically more recent phenomenon then in the core countries, and they present a smaller percentage of Muslim citizens and members of society. And still, all three countries show specific cases, diverse Muslim communities and processes of establishment. The Portuguese example makes this particularly clear, as its Muslim presence must be understood as a postcolonial rather than a recent immigration phenomenon. In Finland, there has been a permanent (but very small) Muslim community since the 1870s (in their fifth generation by now), while the majority of Muslim residents only arrived from the 1990s onwards; the latter being the case of Ireland. In Portugal, again, it is also since the 1990s that its Muslim community experiences a diversification due to immigration.

What are the different historical linkages and experiences with Islam in these countries? Which legal positions, policies and forms of engagements shape the societal experience of and with Muslims?

The workshop provides a platform for comparative debate on such similarities and particularities by bringing together experts on Muslims in Finland, Ireland and Portugal.

The speakers from Finland are members of a research project entitled The Governance of Transnational Islam, funded by the Academy of Finland (University of Helsinki), and those from the Republic of Ireland participate in the IRCHSS-Project History of Islam in Ireland (University College Cork).

The workshop is open to the academic and general public. An essence of the outcome will be accessible online in Portuguese and English, and it is aimed to publish original papers as a special issue of an academic journal concerned with the questions of religion and immigration.

 

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