Faith, Fact, and Fiction: What Muslim Americans Really Mean for U.S. Democracy
Publication
, Journal Article
Read, JNG
Published in: Contexts
2008
Seven years after the 9/11 terrorist attacks catapulted Muslims into the American spotlight, concerns and fears over their presence and assimilation remain at an all-time high. Yet, research on Muslim Americans themselves shows they are diverse, well-integrated, and largely mainstream in their attitudes, values, and behaviors.
Duke Scholars
Published In
Contexts
ISSN
1536-5042
Publication Date
2008
Volume
7
Start / End Page
39 / 43
Citation
APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Read, J. N. G. (2008). Faith, Fact, and Fiction: What Muslim Americans Really Mean for U.S. Democracy. Contexts, 7, 39–43.
Read, Jen nan Ghazal. “Faith, Fact, and Fiction: What Muslim Americans Really Mean for U.S. Democracy.” Contexts 7 (2008): 39–43.
Read JNG. Faith, Fact, and Fiction: What Muslim Americans Really Mean for U.S. Democracy. Contexts. 2008;7:39–43.
Read, Jen nan Ghazal. “Faith, Fact, and Fiction: What Muslim Americans Really Mean for U.S. Democracy.” Contexts, vol. 7, 2008, pp. 39–43.
Read JNG. Faith, Fact, and Fiction: What Muslim Americans Really Mean for U.S. Democracy. Contexts. 2008;7:39–43.
Published In
Contexts
ISSN
1536-5042
Publication Date
2008
Volume
7
Start / End Page
39 / 43