Araştırma Makalesi

How the Challenges for Somali Muslim Men in the UK Affect their Identity Resilience?

Cilt: 11 Sayı: 21 15 Haziran 2024
PDF İndir
TR EN

How the Challenges for Somali Muslim Men in the UK Affect their Identity Resilience?

Abstract

Somali men living in the UK mostly encounter difficulties related to racism, discrimination, Islamophobia, social position, and economic circumstances, which may be attributed to their relatively recent arrival in the UK. The current study explores how the intersecting identities of Somali Muslim men in the UK affect their lives, challenges and identity resilience. The objective of this research is not to generalize the difficulties encountered by Somali men in the UK. Instead, the purpose is to thoroughly investigate how the personal experiences of Somali men impact their identity resilience. The study adopts the qualitative research methodology, employing semi-structured individual in-depth interviews with Somali men in the UK, and applying Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA). The research findings revealed that the intersection of race and religion, being a first generation and the lack of a concrete role model among Somali men, low social class and socioeconomic standing, and finance and interest-related matters seem to create unique challenges for Somali men in the UK. Moreover, these challenges experienced by Somali men in the UK seem to impact their emotions. It appears that the challenges faced by Somali men also negatively affect the identity principles of “self-efficacy”, “self-esteem”, “distinctiveness”, and “continuity”, which are fundamental concepts in Identity Process Theory (IPT) and the recently developed “Identity Resilience Model”. Although the religious identities of Somali men in the UK usually create challenges that negatively impact or threaten their identity resilience, their religious beliefs and religiosity also strengthen their identity resilience by providing a strong coping mechanism for their challenges.

Keywords

Kaynakça

  1. Abduljaber, Malek - Kalin, Ilker. “Evaluating the Explanatory Power of Social Identity Theory, Inter-group Contact Hypothesis, and Integrated Threat Theory in Explaining Prejudice against Muslim Americans in the United States”. The Rest: Journal of Politics and Development 9/2 (2019), 89-106.
  2. Abdullahi, Sahra Bashir - Wei, Li. “Living with diversity and change: intergenerational differences in language and identity in the Somali community in Britain”. International journal of the sociology of language 269 (2021), 15-45. https://doi.org/10.1515/ijsl-2020-0007
  3. Alkhammash, Reem. “Islamophobia in The UK Print Media: An Intersectional Critical Discourse Analysis”. International Journal of English Language and Linguistics Research 8/2 (March 2020), 91-103. Baker, J. Paul - Levon, Erez. “’That’s what I call a man’: representations of ra-cialised and classed masculinities in the UK print media”. Gender and Lan-guage 10/1 (2016).
  4. Breakwell, Glynis Marie et al. “The identity resilience index: Development and validation in two UK samples”. Identity 22/2 (September 2021), 166-182.
  5. Breakwell, Glynis Marie - Jaspal, Rusi. “Coming out, distress and identity threat in gay men in the United Kingdom”. Sexuality Research & Social Policy (2021), 1166-1177. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13178-021-00608-4
  6. Breakwell, Glynis Marie - Jaspal, Rusi. “Identity change, uncertainty and mis¬trust in relation to fear and risk of COVID-19”. Journal of Risk Research 24/3–4 (December 2020), 335–351.
  7. Breakwell, Glynis Marie. Coping with threatened identities. London: Psychology Press, 1986.
  8. Breakwell, Glynis Marie. “Social representations and social identity”. Papers on social representations 2 (1993), 198-217.

Ayrıntılar

Birincil Dil

İngilizce

Konular

Din Sosyolojisi

Bölüm

Araştırma Makalesi

Yayımlanma Tarihi

15 Haziran 2024

Gönderilme Tarihi

16 Şubat 2024

Kabul Tarihi

5 Haziran 2024

Yayımlandığı Sayı

Yıl 2024 Cilt: 11 Sayı: 21

Kaynak Göster

ISNAD
Karacan, Durali. “How the Challenges for Somali Muslim Men in the UK Affect their Identity Resilience?”. Mütefekkir 11/21 (01 Haziran 2024): 219-242. https://doi.org/10.30523/mutefekkir.1501614.

Cited By