Where Are You Really From? Understanding Misrecognition from the Experiences of French and Dutch Muslim Women Students
Author(s) / Creator(s)
da Silva, Caroline
de Jong, Judith
Feddes, Allard
Doosje, Bertjan
Gruev-Vintila, Andreea
Abstract / Description
We investigate experiences of misrecognition through comparative focus groups with headscarf-wearing Muslim women students in France (N = 46) and in the Netherlands (N = 32). In both countries, women reported experiencing misrecognition across four interrelated dimensions: (1) totalising misrecognition, having their Muslim identity highlighted at the expense of other group affiliations; (2) membership misrecognition, having their national belonging denied; (3) content misrecognition, having negative characteristics associated with their religious identity, and (4) invisibility, having their voices unheard in society and/or their identities excluded from (public) professions. Participants conceptualised misrecognition as a product of deficient intergroup (Muslims vs. non-Muslims) contact and as being worse in France. French women felt relatively more invisible in the public sphere than their Dutch counterparts and perceived politicians across the political spectrum as an important source of misrecognition. These findings suggest that misrecognition is present in Europe, and potentially worse in France, raising the question about what measures might be taken to counter this form of group-based exclusion.
Keyword(s)
Misrecognition Muslim women headscarf social identities social representationsPersistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2021-12-23
Journal title
Journal of Social and Political Psychology
Publisher
PsychArchives
Publication status
acceptedVersion
Review status
reviewed
Is version of
Citation
da Silva, C., de Jong, J., Feddes, A., Doosje, B., & Gruev-Vintila, A. (in press). Where Are You Really From? Understanding Misrecognition from the Experiences of French and Dutch Muslim Women Students [Accepted manuscript]. Journal of Social and Political Psychology. http://dx.doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.5322
-
da_Silva_de_Jong_Feddes_et al._2021_Understanding_Misrecognition_JSPP_AAM.pdfAdobe PDF - 522.32KBMD5: a4b412095ede1d9baa11816772d79b3dDescription: Accepted Manuscript
-
There are no other versions of this object.
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)da Silva, Caroline
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)de Jong, Judith
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Feddes, Allard
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Doosje, Bertjan
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Gruev-Vintila, Andreea
-
PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2021-12-23T19:08:19Z
-
Made available on2021-12-23T19:08:19Z
-
Date of first publication2021-12-23
-
Abstract / DescriptionWe investigate experiences of misrecognition through comparative focus groups with headscarf-wearing Muslim women students in France (N = 46) and in the Netherlands (N = 32). In both countries, women reported experiencing misrecognition across four interrelated dimensions: (1) totalising misrecognition, having their Muslim identity highlighted at the expense of other group affiliations; (2) membership misrecognition, having their national belonging denied; (3) content misrecognition, having negative characteristics associated with their religious identity, and (4) invisibility, having their voices unheard in society and/or their identities excluded from (public) professions. Participants conceptualised misrecognition as a product of deficient intergroup (Muslims vs. non-Muslims) contact and as being worse in France. French women felt relatively more invisible in the public sphere than their Dutch counterparts and perceived politicians across the political spectrum as an important source of misrecognition. These findings suggest that misrecognition is present in Europe, and potentially worse in France, raising the question about what measures might be taken to counter this form of group-based exclusion.en_US
-
Publication statusacceptedVersionen
-
Review statusrevieweden
-
SponsorshipThis research is part of the project "Misrecognising Minorities in Europe" (MisMiE) funded by the Volkswagen Foundation (Grant number 94 788), led by Andreas Zick and Stephen Reicher and coordinated by Arin H. Ayanian and Yaatsil Guevara Gonzalez. The Foundation played no role in the research design, execution, analysis, interpretation and reporting.en_US
-
Citationda Silva, C., de Jong, J., Feddes, A., Doosje, B., & Gruev-Vintila, A. (in press). Where Are You Really From? Understanding Misrecognition from the Experiences of French and Dutch Muslim Women Students [Accepted manuscript]. Journal of Social and Political Psychology. http://dx.doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.5322en_US
-
ISSN2195-3325
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/4731
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.5322
-
Language of contentengen_US
-
PublisherPsychArchivesen_US
-
Is version ofhttps://doi.org/10.5964/jspp.1532
-
Keyword(s)Misrecognitionen_US
-
Keyword(s)Muslim womenen_US
-
Keyword(s)headscarfen_US
-
Keyword(s)social identitiesen_US
-
Keyword(s)social representationsen_US
-
Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
-
TitleWhere Are You Really From? Understanding Misrecognition from the Experiences of French and Dutch Muslim Women Studentsen_US
-
DRO typearticleen_US
-
Journal titleJournal of Social and Political Psychologyen
-
Visible tag(s)PsychOpen GOLDen_US
-
Visible tag(s)Accepted Manuscripten_US