Lawfare Podcast Episode #2: Samuel Rascoff on "Official Islam"

Benjamin Wittes
Tuesday, February 14, 2012, 10:50 PM
Samuel Rascoff, a law professor at NYU, has a fascinating new article out in the Stanford Law Review entitled, "Establishing Official Islam? The Law and Strategy of Counter-Radicalization." As someone who is frankly not in love with the law review article as a form, I found this one so engaging that I asked Sam to drop by Brookings today and record a conversation about it. Hence, Episode #2 of the Lawfare Podcast.

Published by The Lawfare Institute
in Cooperation With
Brookings

Samuel Rascoff, a law professor at NYU, has a fascinating new article out in the Stanford Law Review entitled, "Establishing Official Islam? The Law and Strategy of Counter-Radicalization." As someone who is frankly not in love with the law review article as a form, I found this one so engaging that I asked Sam to drop by Brookings today and record a conversation about it. Hence, Episode #2 of the Lawfare Podcast. Enjoy.

The abstract to Sam's article reads as follows:
In the name of national security, federal and local governments have begun to intervene domestically in the religious lives of Muslims and into Islam itself. Taken together, these interventions form part of the emerging strategy of counter-radicalization, by which officials aim to diminish the pull of radical Islamic ideology in part by promoting more “mainstream” theological alternatives. Both the official opposition to radical Islam (as opposed to the violence that it is thought to generate) and the support for more palatable (to the state, that is) religious alternatives generate friction with the Establishment Clause and the values that it enshrines. But the prospect of establishing “Official Islam” is not the only worry surrounding counter-radicalization. Counter-radicalization also suffers from a number of strategic flaws that have become apparent in the context of British counter-radicalization efforts undertaken over the last five years. Most fundamentally, Western governments, including our own, are unlikely to succeed in tackling the risk of future terrorism by attempting to shape religious ideology. In fact, this strategy is likely to backfire by stoking animosities and fear. This Article describes the emergence of American counter-radicalization and its roots in the British example, highlights the tension between this area of official endeavor and the Establishment Clause, and reveals the tight connection between the legal and strategic challenges with which American counter-radicalization must contend.

Benjamin Wittes is editor in chief of Lawfare and a Senior Fellow in Governance Studies at the Brookings Institution. He is the author of several books.

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