Duke Law > Duke Law Scholarship Repository > Conferences > DFLSC Symposium > 2010 > Muslim in America
Event Title
Evaluating the Perception of Islam and being Muslim in Contemporary Media & Government
Location
Duke Law School, Room 3037
Start Date
5-2-2010 9:15 AM
End Date
5-2-2010 10:30 AM
Description
Evaluating the Perception of Islam and Being Muslim in Contemporary Media & Government
The panelists present papers published in the Duke forum for law & Social change, volume 2 (2010).
Recorded on February 05, 2010.
Duke Forum for Law & Social Change.
Appearing: Neil Vidmar, moderator ; Sheryll Cashin, Aziz Huq, and Tung Yin, panelists.
Related Paper
Sheryll Cashin, To Be Muslim or “Muslim-Looking” in America: A Comparative Exploration of Racial and Religious Prejudice in the 21st Century, 2 Duke Forum for Law & Social Change 125-139 (2010).
Available at: http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/dflsc/vol2/iss1/6
Related Paper II
Tung Yin, Through a Screen Darkly: Hollywood as a Measure of Discrimination Against Arabs and Muslims, 2 Duke Forum for Law & Social Change 103-123 (2010).
Available at: http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/dflsc/vol2/iss1/5
Related Paper III
Aziz Z. Huq, Modeling Terrorist Radicalization, 2 Duke Forum for Law & Social Change 39-69 (2010).
Available at: http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/dflsc/vol2/iss1/3
Evaluating the Perception of Islam and being Muslim in Contemporary Media & Government
Duke Law School, Room 3037
Evaluating the Perception of Islam and Being Muslim in Contemporary Media & Government
The panelists present papers published in the Duke forum for law & Social change, volume 2 (2010).
Recorded on February 05, 2010.
Duke Forum for Law & Social Change.
Appearing: Neil Vidmar, moderator ; Sheryll Cashin, Aziz Huq, and Tung Yin, panelists.