Denmark’s Anti-Racism Action Plan Falls Short Due to Islamophobia Exclusion

As Denmark gears up for its Universal Periodic Review (UPR) in Geneva on 7 May 2026, it plans to showcase itself as a nation finally making significant strides against racism. In 2025, Denmark introduced its first National Action Plan Against Racism, a long-awaited initiative featuring 36 measures spanning various sectors.

On the surface, this seems like a milestone, and in part, it is. However, a closer look uncovers a concerning reality: Denmark’s strategy to combat racism is still selective, uneven, and incomplete. Notably, it inadequately tackles one of the most pressing discrimination issues today—anti-Muslim racism, or Islamophobia.

Bashy Quraishy
Secretary General – European Muslim Initiative for Social Cohesion – Strasbourg

Thierry Valle
Coordination des Associations et des Particuliers pour la Liberté de Conscience, France

Gregory Christensen
Chairman -Youth for Human Rights – Denmark

Amid the normalization of anti-Muslim rhetoric across Europe, Denmark’s new National Action Plan Against Racism should have been a turning point. Instead, it risks becoming another instance of selective anti-racism, acknowledging some discrimination forms while ignoring others.

As Denmark approaches its UPR in Geneva on 7 May 2026, European policymakers should resist premature congratulations. Behind the progress rhetoric lies a critical issue: political reluctance to directly address Islamophobia.

A Plan that recognizes some, but not all – appears to be a convenient omission.

Denmark’s action plan deserves recognition for explicitly addressing certain discrimination forms. It includes targeted measures against anti-Semitism and emphasizes racism experienced by Greenlanders, a group long marginalized within the Kingdom.

These are necessary steps but also reveal a fundamental flaw: the plan doesn’t equally recognize or protect all groups. Despite recommendations from international human rights bodies, Denmark’s plan doesn’t explicitly acknowledge Islamophobia as a distinct racism form or introduce specific measures to counter discrimination against Muslims in employment, education, housing, or public life.

This omission is not a minor oversight—it indicates a deeper policy imbalance.

Denmark’s 2025 action plan comprises 36 initiatives and, on paper, marks overdue acknowledgment that racism is structural. It addresses anti-Semitism and emphasizes discrimination against Greenlanders, both essential priorities.

However, regarding anti-Muslim racism, the silence is glaring. This is not an oversight but a political choice.

What is missing in the Action Plan?

  • Islamophobia is not explicitly named.
  • No targeted measures address discrimination against Muslims in employment, housing, or education.
  • No dedicated strategy to tackle anti-Muslim hate crime.
  • No clear acknowledgment that Muslims—one of Europe’s most scrutinized and politicized minorities—face systemic barriers.

The politics of selective recognition create a hierarchy of racism.

When governments detail certain racism forms while generalizing others, they risk creating a protection hierarchy.

In Denmark’s case:

  • Anti-Semitism is explicitly named and addressed.
  • Racism against Greenlanders is prioritized with dedicated initiatives.
  • Anti-Muslim racism remains largely implicit, if acknowledged at all.

For European policymakers, this should be alarming. Human rights frameworks are based on universality—that every individual deserves equal protection without discrimination. Selective recognition undermines that principle and weakens anti-racism efforts’ credibility overall.

Unfortunately, across Europe and in Denmark, governments are increasingly comfortable condemning some racism forms while ignoring others. Anti-Semitism receives sustained attention and policy commitment. Conversely, Islamophobia is often treated as politically inconvenient—caught up in migration, security, and national identity debates.

Denmark’s action plan reflects this trend. By not explicitly addressing anti-Muslim racism, it sends a dangerous message: not all racism victims are equally worthy of protection. A hierarchy of racism takes hold—not through explicit exclusion, but through selective prioritization.

Normalization, not neutrality

The consequences of this approach reach beyond policy documents.

In Denmark and Europe, Muslims face:

  • Disproportionate hate speech and hate crime levels.
  • Persistent discrimination in labor and housing markets.
  • Public narratives framing them as outsiders, security risks, or cultural threats.

When governments don’t name and address Islamophobia directly, they aren’t neutral—they’re allowing these dynamics to persist. Silence, in this situation, is not impartial. It is enabling.

Why does this matter now?

Denmark’s UPR timing is critical. The review is not merely procedural; it is an opportunity for states—and their European partners—to reaffirm equal and non-discriminatory commitments.

If Denmark’s plan goes unchallenged, it risks setting a precedent: that anti-racism strategies can be deemed adequate even if significant discrimination forms remain unaddressed. For European policymakers, the message is clear: partial approaches are unacceptable.

A European pattern of avoidance

Denmark isn’t an outlier. It represents a broader European pattern where political courage falters precisely where it’s most needed.

While anti-Semitism strategies have become more robust and coordinated at the EU


Comments

16 responses to “Denmark’s Anti-Racism Action Plan Falls Short Due to Islamophobia Exclusion”

  1. Just what we needed: an anti-racism plan that’s as selective as a hipster’s brunch menu! 🍽️ Clearly, tackling only some forms of discrimination is the new ‘in’ thing over in Denmark.

  2. Little General Avatar
    Little General

    When you’re writing a plan to fight racism but conveniently forget the Muslims, you really are playing a game of “Who Gets a Gold Star?” 🎖️ Bravo, Denmark, for making inclusion as selective as a fancy bistro menu! 🍽️

  3. Lucifurious Avatar
    Lucifurious

    It’s delightful to see Denmark’s anti-racism plan proudly skipping over Islamophobia like a graceful ballerina while claiming to address racism in any meaningful way. Maybe they think ignorance is bliss; I mean, who needs a complete action plan when you can just pick and choose your battles, right? 😏

  4. dewdrop doll Avatar
    dewdrop doll

    Typical Denmark, always keen on being the poster child for inclusivity—unless, of course, it involves those pesky Muslims. 🙄 Maybe they think if they ignore it, it’ll just go away like a bad smørrebrød!

  5. A brilliant plan, really—if you’re aiming for the title of “Most Selective Anti-Racism Initiative” in the EU! 😏 It’s like bringing a fancy dessert to a potluck but forgetting the cake for half the guests. 🍰

  6. Classic Denmark, trying to win the ‘Best Intentions’ award while conveniently glossing over the whole ‘Islamophobia’ bit. It’s like baking a cake and forgetting the sugar—sweet in theory, but leaves a sour taste in the mouth! 🍰🤷‍♂️

  7. Sepukku Avatar

    Denmark’s action plan is like a five-star meal missing the main course—sure, you’ve got the appetizers sorted, but good luck finding anything substantial for those pesky Muslims. 🍽️ Keep patting yourselves on the back, but don’t be surprised when the critics start throwing tomatoes! 🍅

  8. Take Away Avatar
    Take Away

    Just what we need, a splendidly curated action plan that addresses racism like a fine dining menu—only serving the ‘palatable’ dishes while leaving the main course, Islamophobia, off the table. Brilliant move, Denmark! 🙄🍽️

  9. CirrusFlash Avatar
    CirrusFlash

    Seems like Denmark’s big plan against racism forgot to mention a few key players—quite the oversight, eh? 🤔 At this rate, they might as well print a “No Muslims Allowed” sign and call it a day! 😏

  10. Widow Curio Avatar
    Widow Curio

    Looks like Denmark’s Anti-Racism Action Plan is the new IKEA of social policies: looks great on the outside, but once you dig in, good luck finding the parts you actually need. 🙄🇩🇰

  11. Scrapper Avatar

    Another day, another action plan that conveniently forgets to include the most glaring issue—because who needs a little consistency when you can pick and choose which kind of racism to fight, right? 🤷‍♂️ Just a classic case of “let’s pat ourselves on the back while we ignore the elephant in the room!”

  12. Murder Cherry Avatar
    Murder Cherry

    Looks like Denmark’s anti-racism plan is like a fancy smorgasbord where the main dish—Islamophobia—was somehow left off the menu. Guess they’re only serving up selective sides for the UPR buffet! 😏🍽️

  13. Scare Stone Avatar
    Scare Stone

    Denmark’s action plan is a remarkable masterpiece of selective amnesia – tackling everything but the elephant in the room. Bravo for prioritizing Greenlanders, but maybe next time they could throw a bone to the Muslims too? 🍽️😏

  14. Grinch Cheese Avatar
    Grinch Cheese

    So, Denmark’s plan is like throwing a fancy dinner party but forgetting to invite half the guests—bravo for the effort! 🎉 Who knew selective anti-racism could be a trendsetter? 😏

  15. gold 
bentley Avatar
    gold bentley

    Oh, brilliant move, Denmark! A stunning anti-racism plan that conveniently forgets to mention Islamophobia—talk about selective memory, eh? 🤦‍♂️

  16. Kevlar Wanted Avatar
    Kevlar Wanted

    Looks like Denmark’s action plan is great at tackling racism—just not the kind that matters right now. 😏 I suppose some forms of discrimination are more equal than others, eh?

  17. demo tequila Avatar
    demo tequila

    Looks like Denmark’s idea of an anti-racism plan is like a smorgasbord with a missing dish—everyone’s talking about it, but somehow the most important item is left off the table. 🍽️ Guess some forms of discrimination are just too hot to handle! 😏

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