To speak out or not to speak out? Exploring the reporting of discrimination among Muslims and Jews in Switzerland

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_7F5320DEBF2D
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
To speak out or not to speak out? Exploring the reporting of discrimination among Muslims and Jews in Switzerland
Journal
Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Author(s)
Lindemann Anaïd
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2022
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Pages
Forthcoming
Language
english
Abstract
Muslims and Jews are among the minorities in Switzerland who are most disliked and discriminated against, but the frequency with which the two groups report racist incidents to official bodies and initiate court proceedings differs greatly. The goal of this paper is to establish the extent of these differences and to explore the reasons for them. We use data from a representative survey, official datasets of reported cases of discrimination and legal proceedings, as well as 27 semi-structured interviews with representatives from Muslim and Jewish organizations, and from government centres that record incidents. We show that Muslims and Jews perceive discrimination at similar levels, but that the latter report discrimination and initiate court proceedings much more frequently than Muslims. We find that these differences can be explained by a divergence between the two groups in terms of perceived costs, in-group norms, structural factors, and organizational opportunities. In comparison to Jews, Muslims typically (1) are less confident that reporting discrimination will have a positive outcome; (2) are more concerned about being seen as “victims”; (3) are less well-informed about the possibilities available to them to report discrimination; and (4) come from communities that have lower organizational capacities in this regard.
Create date
28/09/2022 8:25
Last modification date
27/10/2023 6:09
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