REFERENCES

 

Allievi, S. 1999. New Muslims. The converted to Islam. Roma, Edizioni Lavoro. (Italian)

Allievi, S. 2012. Islam in change and not changing Islam. In Italy of Religions. A construction site without a design. Eds.: Naso, P. and Salvarani, B., Bologna, EMI, 98-115. (Italian)

Berger, P.I.
1969. A rumour of angels. Modern Society and the rediscovery of the sacred. New York, Doubleday.

Bombardieri, M.
2011. Mosques of Italy. Bologna, EMI.

Bombardieri, M. 2015. The Mosque: place of prayers and socialization. Confronti, Special issue, 5-6. June 2015.

Confronti 2015. Minarets and Dialogue. Confronti, Special issue, June 2015.

Cresswell, T. and Merriman, P. 2011. Geographies of Mobilities: Practices, Spaces, Subjects. London, Ashgate.

Datta, A. 2009. 'This is special humor': visual narratives of Polish masculinities on London's building sites. In Polish Migration to the UK in the 'New' European Union: After 2004. Ed.: Burrell, K., Aldershot, Ashgate, 189-210.

El Ayoubi, M. 2015. The Challenge of Italian Islam. Minarets and Dialogue. Confronti, Special issue, 2-4.

Erkhamp, P. 2016.Geography of Migration I. Refugees. Published online August 29, 2016. Progress in Human Geography 1-10.

Eva, F. 2012. Caging/self-caging: materiality and memes as tools for geopolitical analysis. Human Geography 5. (3): 1-14.

Farinelli, F. 1998. The Mediterranean, the difference, the deferment. Geotema 12. 57-62. (Italian)

Gritti, R. and Allam, M.
2001. Islam, Italy. Who are and what Muslims living among us think. Roma, Guerini e Associati. (Italian)

Hyndman, J. and Giles, W. 2016. Refugees in Extended Exile: Living on the Edge. London, Routledge.

Iannucci, M. 2015. Muslim women under marginalisation. Nigrizia 6. 55-57. (Italian)

Idos, Unar, Confronti 2015. From Discrimination to Rights. 2015 Migration Report. Roma, Idos Research Centre. (Italian)

Kellerman, A. 2006. Personal mobilities. London and New York, Routledge.

Kocsis, K., Molnár Sansum, J., Kreinin, L., Michalkó, G., Bottlik, Z. Szabó, B., Balizs, D. and Varga, G. 2016. Geographical characteristics of contemporary international migration in and into Europe. Hungarian Geographical Bulletin 65. (4): 369-390. Crossref

Lano, P. 2005. Islam of Italy. Roma, Edizioni Paoline. (Italian)

Malouf, A. 2010. Les Identités Meurtrieres. Paris, Librairie Générale Française.

Montanari, A. and Paluzzi, E. 2016. Human mobility and settlement patterns from eight EU countries to the Italian regions of Lombardy, Veneto, Tuscany, Lazio and Sicily. Hungarian Geographical Bulletin 65. (4): 331-344. Crossref

Naso, P.
2013. Old and new religious pluralism in Italy. In Vademecum: Religions, dialogue, integration. Ed.: Ministry of Home Affairs, Republic of Italy. Roma, Ministry of Home Affairs, 37-46. (Italian)

Naso, P. and Salvarani, B.
eds. 2012. Italy of Religions. A construction site without design. Bologna, EMI. (Italian)

Nigrizia 2015. Dossier Islam in Italy. Nigrizia, Special issue. Ed.: Al Ayoubi, M., June 2015. 42-60.

Pap, N. and Glied, V. 2017. The Hungarian Border Barrier and Islam. Journal of Muslims in Europe 6. 104-131. Crossref

Pap, N., Reményi, P., Csaszar, Z.M. and Végh, A. 2014. Islam and the Hungarians, Mitteilungen der Osterreichischen Geographischen Gesellschaft 156. 191-220. Crossref

Paradiso, M. 2013. The Role of Information and Communications Technologies in Migrants from Tunisia's Jasmine Revolution. Growth Change 44. 168-182. Crossref

Sen, A. 2006. Identity and Violence. The Illusion of Destiny. Bari, Laterza. (Italian)

Valentine, G. 2007. Theorizing and researching intersectionality: a challenge for feminist geography. The Professional Geographer 59. 10-21. Crossref

Valentine, G. and Sadgrove, J. 2012. Lived difference: a narrative account of spatiotemporal processes of social differentiation. Environment and Planning A, 44. (9): 2049-2063. Crossref

van der Broeck, L.O. 1990. Islam occidentalement? Ghent, Communicatie & Cognitie.

Zannini, F.
2013. Islam in Italy: mapping, paths, processes. In Vademecum: Religions, dialogue, integration. Ed.: Ministry of Home Affairs, Republic of Italy. Roma, Ministry of Home Affairs, 57-69.