Search results for: islam

Showing 1 - 10 of 78 results

12 October 2016
Griffith's Muslim Students Association will host the annual 'Understanding Islam' competition this Friday.

‘Understanding Islam’ event values diversity

Griffith University Muslim Students Association aims to remove misconceptions and increase student involvement

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20 August 2016

Reporting Islam Project wins Qld Multicultural Award

Griffith University has won a 2016 Queensland Multicultural Award for its ground-breaking Reporting Islam Project.

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2 June 2016

Spotlight on Reporting Islam

Associate Professor Jacqui Ewart and Professor Mark Pearson from the School of Humanities, Languages and Social Science answer key questions...

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8 December 2015
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30 June 2014
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21 March 2014
View of Istanbul from Suleymaniye Mosque

Study tour offers insight, immersion into Islam

Students from Griffith University’s School of Humanities recently returned from a month-long Muslim World Study Tour. It was an experience both memorable and inspiring, writes Elise Stephenson

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8 September 2010

‘Islam and Democracy in Indonesia’s Foreign Policy’

Presented by Dr Rizal Sukma, Executive Director, Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), Jakarta, Indonesia. “Perspectives: Asia” is a...

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18 May 2006

Griffith scholars promote understanding of Islam

Griffith University’s Islamic Research Unit (GIRU) is on the way to becoming the nation’s leading unit for Islamic research with...

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4 April 2023
Manipulator concept

Sovereign Citizens: Eccentrics or Extremists?

Sovereign citizens or ‘sovcitz’ reject the authority of the government and legal systems. The COVID-19 pandemic has fuelled extremism, including sovereign citizen beliefs in Australia, says Griffith University’s Dr Keiran Hardy, and poses challenges to law enforcement and public safety.

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16 February 2023
Replacement

What makes the idea of civilisations being replaced so popular again?

The idea of a "great" replacement has been the source of extremist politics for some time, it has entered the mainstream through a gradual process of normalisation since the turn of the century. These views are grounded in a mythology that civilisations are racially and culturally distinct and fixed in time. Dr Susan de Groot Heupner considers the role of “great” replacement and premillennialism as they relate to the Wieambilla siege.

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