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oapen-20.500.12657-396652020-06-18T09:39:24Z Whose Responsibility? Dreher, Tanja Anti-racism strategies Australia Islamophobia responses Cross-cultural education Terrorism and racism Community anti-racism strategies bic Book Industry Communication::1 Geographical Qualifiers::1M Australasia, Oceania & other land areas::1MB Australasia::1MBF Australia This research monograph documents and analyses the many ways in which communities experiencing racism after September 11, 2001 have responded to increased prejudice, harassment and discrimination. While much research analyses the 'problem' of racism, this book highlights the responses developed by targeted communities, including strategies of Interfaith, cross-cultural education, media responses and community cultural development work. A follow-up to the 2006 work Targeted, the research underlying this book is based on extensive community consultations and interviews with Arab, Muslim and Sikh communities in Sydney. It maps the field and identifies common challenges with the aim of contributing to wider processes of innovation in community anti-racism work. 2020-06-17T14:13:01Z 2020-06-17T14:13:01Z 2006 book ONIX_20200617_9781863654210_6 1834-2027 http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/39665 eng UTS Shopfront Series application/pdf n/a whose-responsibility.pdf UTS ePRESS 10.5130/978-1-86365-421-0 10.5130/978-1-86365-421-0 feb523b3-bdff-4e43-ad50-063a48b87781 3 47 Broadway open access
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This research monograph documents and analyses the many ways in which communities experiencing racism after September 11, 2001 have responded to increased prejudice, harassment and discrimination. While much research analyses the 'problem' of racism, this book highlights the responses developed by targeted communities, including strategies of Interfaith, cross-cultural education, media responses and community cultural development work. A follow-up to the 2006 work Targeted, the research underlying this book is based on extensive community consultations and interviews with Arab, Muslim and Sikh communities in Sydney. It maps the field and identifies common challenges with the aim of contributing to wider processes of innovation in community anti-racism work.
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