Accepting Muslim minority practices: A case of discriminatory or normative intolerance?

Publication date

2020-07-01

Authors

Sleijpen, Sander
Verkuyten, MaykelORCID 0000-0003-0137-1527ISNI 0000000114807698
Adelman, LeviISNI 0000000492831505

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Article
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Abstract

West European societies have seen strong debates about the acceptance of Muslim minority practices. In the current research we sought to better understand intolerance by examining whether people use a double standard in which the same practices are tolerated of Christians but not of Muslims (discriminatory intolerance), or rather reject the practices independently of the religious minority group because these are considered to contradict society's normative ways of life (normative intolerance). The results of two survey-embedded experiments among native Dutch were most in agreement with an interpretation in terms of normative intolerance rather than discriminatory intolerance. This suggests that the rejection of Muslim practices has less to do with Muslims per se but rather with the perceived normative deviance of the practices, independently of the religious minority group. These findings broaden the research on anti-Muslim sentiments and thereby the debate on the place of Islam within Western liberal societies.

Keywords

discrimination, Muslims, norms, tolerance, Social Psychology, Sociology and Political Science

Citation

Sleijpen, S, Verkuyten, M & Adelman, L 2020, 'Accepting Muslim minority practices : A case of discriminatory or normative intolerance?', Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, vol. 30, no. 4, pp. 405-418. https://doi.org/10.1002/casp.2450