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This book offers a fascinating account of the post 9/11 anti-Muslim discriminatory wave that over took the U.S. Although the U.S is considered a multicultural and tolerant society where rule of law and writ of the authorities prevail, in the wake of 9/11 the fury of discrimination and hate crimes fell on the American Muslim diaspora. This work is both a qualitative and quantitative attempt to explore the reality and feeling of being a hate crime or discrimination victim. It presents victims' heartbreaking narratives of the hate crimes and acts of discrimination they faced in post 9/11 America.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book offers a fascinating account of the post 9/11 anti-Muslim discriminatory wave that over took the U.S. Although the U.S is considered a multicultural and tolerant society where rule of law and writ of the authorities prevail, in the wake of 9/11 the fury of discrimination and hate crimes fell on the American Muslim diaspora. This work is both a qualitative and quantitative attempt to explore the reality and feeling of being a hate crime or discrimination victim. It presents victims' heartbreaking narratives of the hate crimes and acts of discrimination they faced in post 9/11 America. The book also stresses quantitatively that discrimination and hate crimes against a certain diaspora can easily invoke reactionary feelings and enmity back at home country against the group (host nation) to which some individual perpetrators belong.
Autorenporträt
Muhammad Saad was born in Rawalpindi, Pakistan in June 8, 1990, He received the B.E. degree in electrical engineering from the HITEC University, Pakistan, in 2013, and Masters degrees in Power engineering from University of South Australia in 2015 respectively. A member of IEEE power and energy society.