
Annual Islamophobia Conferences 2014 onwards
IHRC’s annual Islamophobia conference was launched in 2014 and is pat of network of conferences held across Europe around the second weekend in December each year.>

IHRC’s annual Islamophobia conference was launched in 2014 and is pat of network of conferences held across Europe around the second weekend in December each year.>

Find out more about this unique and timely conference from the following report, including links to all the videos and photos from the event. You can find an album of photos from the day which can be used under Creative Commons licence 2.0 on

In our desire to appease and please, we also erase our own selves, our histories, our stories, scrapping between us instead for recognition from those who will never give it, and who do not deserve our legitimisation.Â

Apply now for this amazing opportunity in Spain. Message forwarded from Dialogo Global Critical Muslim Studies: Decolonial Struggles and Liberation Theologies Granada, Spain – June 16 – June 22, 2019 DEADLINE: FEBRUARY 5, 2019PLEASE SUBMIT YOUR APPLICATION HERE Â Introduction Critical Muslim Studies is inspired

The British state displaces its pro-Israel commitments onto ‘the Jewish community’, constructed as Zionist and thus vulnerable to antisemitism.  This provides a convenient shield for the state’s partnership with the Zionist colonisation project. This agenda aggravates societal divisions – frightening Jews and dividing them from each other, while also separating them from the Left and Muslims.  Â

Join IHRC for an author evening with Amrit Wilson to discuss the new and expanded edition of her book Finding A Voice: Asian Women in Britain. WHEN: Thursday, 21 February 2019 from 6.30pm WHERE: IHRC Bookshop, 202 Preston Road, Wembley, London HA9 8PA The book

Institutionalised Islamophobia has contributed to hate crimes, discrimination and the exclusion of Muslims from political spaces, argues Arzu Merali Where to start or finish a year’s overview of Islamophobia in the UK? We can focus on the comments of various public figures, not least

Anna Soubury’s experiences at the hands of the far-right is the lived and normalised experience of the minoritised, says Arzu Merali. Year in year, for a good ten years or more, all sorts of far-right and a motley band of Zionists, congregate to counter the




