Bibliography and Further Sources

Ambah, Faiza (2015), Mariam.

Aziz, Shaista (2022), “France is on a Dangerous Collision Course With its Muslim Population”, CNN

Begag, Azouz (2007), Shantytown Kid, ed. Naima Wolf and Alec G. Hargreaves, Lincoln, Nebraska: University Of Nebraska Press.

Bertossi, Christophe and Hajjat, Abdellali (2014), Country report: France, [GLOBALCIT], EUDO Citizenship Observatory, 2010/14, Country Reports, 2013/04 – http://hdl.handle.net/1814/19613

Bleich, Erik (2016), “Race Policy in France”, Brookings.

Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. “French Revolution”. Encyclopedia Britannica, 10 Sep. 2020.

Butorin, Pavel (2011), “Podcast: Debating France’s Contentious New Veil Ban”, Radio Free Europe

Camus, Thibault (2021) for “Protesters say French anti-radicalism law is anti-Muslim”, AP News.

Dougall, Emma (2014), “L’affaire du voile”, The Politic.

El Gharib, Sarah (2020), “What does ‘Being French’ Actually Mean?”, Global Citizen.

Everett, S. S., and Vince, R. (Eds.) (2020), Jewish-Muslim Interactions : Performing Cultures Between North Africa and France, Liverpool: United Kingdom, Liverpool University Press.

François, Myriam (2021), ‘‘‘I Felt Violated by the Demand to Undress’: Three Muslim Women on France’s Hostility to the Hijab”, The Guardian.

“French Const. Art. I and II. 1958”

“How Many Immigrants Are There in France?”, INED, April 6, 2020.

Jean-François Copé (2010), “Tearing Away the Veil”, The New York Times

Killian, Caitlin (2003), “The Other Side of the Veil: North African Women in France Respond to the Headscarf Affair” in Gender and Society 17.

Lang, Cady (2021), “Where France’s Possible New Hijab Ban Fits into History”, Time.

Liechfield, John (2019), “What does it mean to be French”, UnHerd.

LOI n° 2010-1192 du 11 octobre 2010 interdisant la dissimulation du visage dans l’espace public (1)Legifrance.gouv.fr, October 12, 2010. 

MacMaster, Neil (2009), “Shantytown Republics” in Transnational Spaces and Identities in the Francophone World, Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press.

Merriam-Webster, The Editors of Merriam-Webster. “Jus soli”. Merriam-Webster Dictionary.

Merriam-Webster, The Editors of Merriam-Webster. “Jus sanguinis”. Merriam-Webster Dictionary.

NutshellEdu. (2013, July 11). The French Revolution -In a Nutshell . Youtube. Retrieved May 3, 2022, from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VEZqarUnVpo?hd=1.

Sahlins, P. (2004), Unnaturally French: Foreign Citizens in the Old Regime and After, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. 

Sciamm, Céline (2014), Bande de Filles, Arte France Cinema. 

Sembène, Ousbane (1996), Black Girl: La Noire De …, New Yorker Video.

Sherman, Daniel J. (2016), “The Perils of Patrimoine: Art, History, and Narrative in the Immigration History Museum, Paris”, Oxford Art Journal, Volume 39, Issue 3.

Silverman, Maxim (1992), Deconstruction the Nation: Immigration, Racism and Citizenship in Modern France. London, United Kingdom: Routledge.

Simon, Patrick (2012), French National Identity and Integration: Who Belongs to the National Community, Washington, DC: Migration Policy Institute.

VICE News. (2020, November 13). How France Became the Muslim World’s Most Hated Country in the West” . Youtube, from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d_l0n_kc_Fc

Weil, P. (2002), Qu’est-ce qu’un français? Histoire de la nationalité française depuis la Révolution [What’s a Frenchman? History of the French nationality since the Revolution], Paris: Grasset. 

Wing, Adrien K. and Smith, Monica N. (2005), “Critical Race Feminism Lifts the Veil?: Muslim Women, France, and the Headscarf Ban”, U Iowa Legal Studies Research Paper No. 08-23, UC Davis Law Review, Vol. 39:743, No. 3.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *