Rahman, Mohammed Mizanur2026-04-262026-04-262024https://repository.iou.edu.gm/handle/123456789/696Discussions on Islamophobia in Britain tend to focus on the impact on innocuous Islamic tradition, dress, rituals, and daily life. The notion that depoliticizing UK Muslims and censoring Muslim-centric political dissent is a desirable normative aim rarely suffers challenge. This IPA postcolonial study examines the experiences of five Muslims following interactions with counter-terrorism authorities in the UK. Analysis of their experiences gives life to statistics exposing discrimination in counter-terrorism policing and policies disproportionately employed against Muslims. Themes emerging from interviews reveal a perception that Muslims have little freedom to discuss political ideas. The study highlights practices such as interrogations, ideological pressure, and restrictions targeting non-violent dissent. It argues that Islamophobia is used to justify extraordinary measures and suppress Muslim activism. The research concludes that such policies function not only to prevent terrorism but to control dissent and maintain ideological dominance.An Analysis of the Orientalist Hostility Toward Islamic Political Thought in the UKThesis