(2016) ‘You need to be sorted with a knife’ : The attempted online silencing of women and people of Muslim faith within academia, Social Media + Society, October-December: 1-11. (2016) A Content Analysis of British Muslims in UK Newspapers, Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 36 (1): 16-31.īarlow, C. (2016) Islamophobia on Social Media, A Qualitative Analysis of the Facebook’s Walls of Hate, International Journal of Cyber Criminology, 10 (1): 1-20.Īwan, I. (2017) Parents of foreign “terrorist” fighters in Syria – will they report their young? Ethnic and Racial Studies, 40 (1): 1-19.Īwan, I. (2017) Cyber-Extremism: Isis and the Power of Social Media, Society, 54 (2): 138-149.Īwan, I. (2017) Doing ‘Dangerous’ autoethnography on Islamophobic victimization, Ethnography (Online) 18(3): 367-386.Īwan, I. (2017) Religion, Identity and Radicalisation: The Experiences of Young British Muslims of the Crises in Syria, Journal of Muslims in Europe, 6 (1): 1-21. (2017) ‘What does terrorism look like?’: university lecturers’ interpretations of their Prevent duties and tackling extremism in UK universities, Critical Studies on Terrorism Īwan, I. (2017) Understanding the Public Perception of a UK Police Constabulary, Police, Practice and Research: An International journal, DOI: 10.1080/15614263.2018.1428098 (2018) “I never did anything wrong! Trojan Horse – A Qualitative Study Uncovering the Impact in Birmingham, British Journal of Sociology of Education 39 (2): 197-211.Īwan, I., Brookes, M., Powell, M., and Stanwell, S. (2018) ‘Certainly the Muslim is the very devil incarnation’: Islamophobia and The Merchant of Venice, The Muslim World, 108 (3): 367-386.Īwan, I. (Eds.) (2012) Policing Cyber hate, Cyber threats and Cyber terrorism, Ashgate Publishing: London.Īwan, I and Zempi, I (2018) ‘ You all look the same’: Non-Muslim men who suffer Islamophobic hate crime in the post-Brexit era, European Journal of Criminology, 1–18. (Eds.) (2013) Extremism, Counter-Terrorism and Policing, Ashgate Publishing: London.Īwan. (2016) (Ed.) Islamophobia in Cyberspace: Hate Crimes go Viral, Ashgate Publishing: London.Īwan, I and Blakemore, B.
#Imran awan latest news Offline
(2016) Islamophobia: Lived Experiences of Online and Offline Victimisation. (2019) Terror in the Classroom: Security, Surveillance and Education, Palgrave Macmillan. (2019) Islamophobic Hate Crimes: A Student Textbook, Routledge, UK and US Edition. (2019) (Eds.) Routledge International Handbook of Islamophobia,Routledge Handbooks, UK and US Edition. Professor Imran Awan was successful in bringing communities together and offering them a toolkit to better understand and report hate crimes.Īwan, I and Zempi, I. The report was received with praise and used by practitioners within hate crime based organisations to better understand the impact of online and offline anti-Muslim hate crimes.ĮSRC project – Tackling anti-Muslim Hate Crime in Birmingham – Professor Imran Awan was awarded research funding to examine the impact of hate crimes in Birmingham following the death of Mohammed Saleem who was murdered by a far-right extremist. Tell MAMA project - The Impacts of online and offline anti-Muslim hostility - Professor Imran Awan was commissioned to lead a team of researchers and produce research evidence for the third party reporting organisation Tell MAMA. The project was part of a larger scale study alongside collaborative work with the head of Birmingham City Council, the police and local community organisations. The project examines the impact of the Prevent Strategy within Higher Education by using interviews and focus group with both students and academics to explore the role of security in Higher Education.ĮSRC project – Syrian Fighters and impacts of returnees in the West Midlands project – Professor Imran Awan was successful in securing research funding from the ESRC and explored the role of communities in the West Midlands and how they could respond to recent terrorist events. Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust – Desecuritising Higher Education project – Professor Imran Awan, alongside Dr Andrew Whiting and Dr Keith Spiller from Birmingham City University have been successful in securing research funding from the JRCT. Commission for Extremism project – Professor Imran Awan was commissioned and selected as one of only 29 experts selected by the UK Commission for Extremism (which was set up the British Prime Minister) to produce an academic research report detailing the harms of social media and extremism.