The Crisis of the Secular Republic and the Sociology of Islamization. The Response of the French Social Science to the Headscarf Affair

No.3(2004)

Abstract
The statute of March 15, 2004, that banned religious symbols in the French schools and State high schools, was the last act of the Headscarf Affair which had been regularly returning to the limelight of the French political scene since 1989. The review of several recent sociological books devoted to the phenomena of islamization helps to buttress the main assumption of the article that the Affair is a symptom of a failing integration of the immigrants from the Muslim countries. These populations are disproportionately hit by social and economic marginalization while, at the same time, summoned to assimilate culturally. Dogmatic republicanism conceives of the assimilation as a necessary precondition for the political integration. In the situation of an increasing social exclusion, however, the push to assimilation adds a cultural offense to an economic injury and incites a contrary reaction: a proud self-assertion of the Muslim identity. The statute banning the headscarves only intensifies this vicious dynamic. The analyses in the reviewed books seem to lead to a different solution: a reasonable response would rather be to tolerate the expressions of religious distinctiveness while, at the same time, trying to integrate people of immigrant origins both economically and politically. This would require, however, a reconstruction of the French republicanism which – at least in its dogmatic form – does not distinguish between the cultural and political sides of integration.

Keywords:
political integration; muslim identity; islamization; France
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