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Julius Maximilian Rogenhofer

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Julius Maximilian Rogenhofer holds an MPhil in International Relations and Politics from the University of Cambridge. He is a Guest Researcher at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs and a Solicitor of the Courts of England and Wales. In October 2018 he will return to the University of Cambridge to pursue a PhD in Political Sociology.

The Latest from Julius Maximilian Rogenhofer

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3 Results
Standing up to China on Human Rights: The Case of the Uyghurs
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  • Standing up to China on Human Rights: The Case of the Uyghurs

    After becoming a significant global player in the world economy and the global geostrategic calculus, China now seeks to redefine the normative framework that determines how states engage with their citizens and with each other. This strategy has considerable implications for the principle of universal human rights. The challenge to human rights universalism is exemplified by China’s crackdown on the country’s Uyghur minority.

    October 23, 2018

    Islam, Migrants and Multiculturalism: A Glance at Germany, Korea and Beyond
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  • Islam, Migrants and Multiculturalism: A Glance at Germany, Korea and Beyond

    Are the principles of tolerance and pluralism that underpin progressive visions of political community under threat? In this essay, the authors discuss the rising tide of Islamophobia and anti-immigrant sentiment in Germany, East Asia, and elsewhere.

    May 22, 2018

    Domestic and International Considerations in China's “Halalification” (清真乏化)
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  • Domestic and International Considerations in China's “Halalification” (清真乏化)

    This article explores Chinese eagerness to join and dominate the global Halal market via the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Secondly, it examines why the state selected the Hui Muslims of Ningxia, rather than the larger community of Uyghurs in Xinjiang, to lead Sino-Muslim world trade. This section introduces model minority theory to assess Chinese government policy. Third, the article assesses the potential conflict between the Chinese export strategy with growing domestic resentment toward increasingly visible Halal segregation.

    March 27, 2018