Call for papers: SISP Conference (Rome, 13-15 September 2012)

The SISP (Italian Political Science Society) standing group Religion and Politics organises three panels for the annual SISP conference (13 – 15 September 2012, University of Roma tre), info: http://www.sisp.it/convegno

SUBMISSION PROCEDURE
In order to be taken into consideration, proposals (that can be submitted either in English or in Italian) should include name, institutional affiliation and contacts of the proponent as well as a working title and a short abstract of up to 250 words.
Proposals must be sent to panel chairs by May 1st, 2012. A decision about which contributions to include in the panel will be made by May 28th, 2012 at the latest.

PANELS

1.  Transnational Religious Actors
Chairs: Valter Coralluzzo
(valter.coralluzzo@libero.it) e Luca Ozzano (luca.ozzano@unito.it)
Section: Relazioni internazionali
Since the early 1970s, when Keohane and Nye’s early works on the theme were published, transnational actors are included in international relations theory and debates. However, the discipline has been slow to acknowledge even the existence of religious actors in transnational perspective. Only very recently, with Jeffrey Haynes and Giorgio Shani’s works, their features have been outlined. However, a comprehensive analysis of this phenomenon is still lacking. Yet, transnational religious actors have been for decades relevant players in international scenarios, and their influence is steadily growing. On the one hand, ancient and established religious organizations such as the Catholic Church are increasing their transnational activities and identity. Moreover, while transnational proselytizing activities have been running for decades throughout the world, a growing number of former domestic religious actors, as well as newly established groups, are increasingly active at the transnational level in fields such as welfare, media, education, and even business. Such activities are often facilitated by the presence in many countries of diaspora and converts communities supporting locally the activities of transnational networks. All these phenomena also have a growing impact on politics, at both the domestic and the international level. The panel welcomes theoretical papers on the subject, as well as comparative works and single-case studies, written in English and Italian.

2. The religious factor in contemporary political movements
Chairs: Alberta Giorgi (albertagiorgi@ces.uc.pt) e Emanuele Polizzi (emanuele.polizzi@unimib.it)
Section: Partecipazione e Movimenti Sociali
Contemporary political arenas show a growing presence of social movements as crucial political actors, either in connection with or in opposition to political parties – which suffer from a wide criticism and distrust, in Italy as well as abroad. Both the identity and the ideological roots of these movements show a high degree of internal diversity and variety. Specifically, religiously inspired movements appear to have an increasingly important role in political campaigns. This happened, for instance, in Arab Spring movements – which resulted in a wide consensus for Islamic political actors, but also in the Italian context, where religious associations have been involved in the ‘Public Water’ and ‘Anti-nuclear’ movements. More broadly, religion is an important element for political identity and organization. It appears to be the case in Italy, for instance, where a religiously inspired political area is gathering consensus after the end of Berlusconi hegemony, and local religious leaders and organizations have a high political weight and influence in local political arenas, such as in Lombardia and in Rome. It appears to be the case in several other countries, such as for US religious lobbies, Church-related movements in Spain and Portugal, and the issue about the recognition
of religions in nowadays Hungary.
The panel invites papers on the following topics:
– forms of political activism and participation of religious movements and organizations;
– relations between local government and religious actors in the field of civic engagement;
– relations between political and religious identity of local activists.
Comparative studies are welcome, as well as single-case studies and theoretical analyses. Researchers working in this field, including PhD students are invited to submit their research papers.

3. Religion and Elections
Chairs: Alberta Giorgi (albertagiorgi@ces.uc.pt) e Luca Ozzano (luca.ozzano@unito.it)
Section: Elezioni e comportamento di voto
Although their real influence is hard to define, and easily changes according to contexts and periods, religion and religiosity are significant factors in the electoral processes of many democratic countries. Such influence can take place both at the institutional and at the value level. At the institutional level, we must first mention religiously oriented parties, which are allowed to participate in most democratic systems and sometimes manage to be win elections and form governments (as for example in the case of the Christian democratic parties in Western Europe, the AKP in Turkey, the BJP in India, etc.). Even non explicitly religiously oriented
parties can have strong religious wings, as in the case of the Republican party in the US. Moreover, they can be influenced by other religious actors, such as churches and other kind of confessional movements and groups, especially if they have many followers in the parties’ constituency. At the values level, religion can influence elections, and particularly campaigns, when parties try to court the religious constituency by proposing issues connected to some kind of religious values. Religious values can therefore contribute to orient the vote of particular segments of the population. In contemporary societies, the religious factor has been gaining importance in several contexts – as it is occurring in US Republican primaries, and in North Africa and Middle East, where, after the Arab spring, religiously oriented parties have been gaining electoral support.
The panel will explore these issues, through both theoretical and empirical papers. We invite both comparative and single-case studies, written in English or Italian. Paper proposals should be around 250 words. Researchers working in this field, including doctoral level students are invited to submit their research papers, possibly at an advanced stage of elaboration. Papers are expected to be relevant and pertinent to the workshops’ themes, and rigorously engaged with literature and methodology.

Nonreligion and the Secular: New Horizons for Multidisciplinary Research

Nonreligion and Secularity Research Network

Nonreligion and the Secular: New Horizons for Multidisciplinary Research

Call for Papers| 4-6 July 2012, Goldsmiths, University of London

Conveners: Lois Lee (ll317@cam.ac.uk), Stacey Gutkowski (stacey.gutkowski@kcl.ac.uk), and Stephen Bullivant (stephen.bullivant@smuc.ac.uk)

Conference Coordinator: Katie Aston (k.aston@gold.ac.uk)

Following decades of neglect, the academic study of nonreligion has grown rapidly in the past five years. The primary aim of this conference is to bring together scholars across a range of academic disciplines (sociology, anthropology, theology, political science, psychology, history, international relations, area studies) to begin to untangle the confused and individually contested concepts of nonreligion and the secular. Is nonreligion a subcategory of the secular or vice versa? How do the two terms structure one another? What are the practical and theoretical implications of the concepts, such as they are and/or in alternative formulations? The aim of this international conference is to contribute to addressing this lacuna. While discussions of nonreligion and the secular have been running largely in parallel, they are potentially mutually enriching topics with significant bearing outside of the academy. This conference will consolidate the achievements already made over the past five years by nonreligion scholars and forge new, multidisciplinary dialogue between these researchers and those primarily working with the concept of the secular. This conference will bring together a range of internationally renowned scholars, including keynote speakers Gracie Davie (Exeter), Callum Brown (Dundee), Monika Wohlrab-Sahr (Leipzig), and Humeira Iqtidar (King’s College London).

The conference engages with a historical moment in which forms of religion and nonreligion have increasingly asserted themselves in the public sphere, in non-Western as well as Western settings. In the case of radical Islamism and New Atheism, such assertions have had powerful, sometimes inflammatory and divisive affect. This urgent wider social and political context demonstrates the urgency of a reasoned, global, scholarly contribution, aimed at further theorising and conceptualising nonreligion and the secular, individually and in relation to each other.

This conference will interrogate three dimensions and welcomes both empirically- and theoretically-based paper contributions which address the following:

1) Nonreligion as a concept in its own right What is meant by the term “nonreligion”? How does it manifest itself in the lives of individuals and in collective social activity and identity? Is it the most appropriate term to encompass a range of phenomena and where may its parameters lie? What is the relationship between nonreligion and modernity? Is nonreligion a resonant category outside of Western contexts?

2) The nonreligious in relation to notions of the secular How do nonreligion and the secular mutually constitute one another? Under what historical social and political conditions did the rise of secularism and secularity facilitate the appearance of the nonreligious? Does the emergence of the nonreligious indicate a new phase of modernity?

3) The implications of nonreligion research for pressing social and political issues associated with discussions of the secular What bearing does nonreligiosity have on social, political and legal questions about social cohesion and multiculturalism? To what extent do the “harder” forms on nonreligion breed intolerance and fundamentalism? What are the implications of nonreligion for the possibility of democratic consensus and governance? To what extent do secular political landscapes outside of the West involve or even require the presence of nonreligious phenomena?

Publication Outcome: We are planning to publish a selection of the papers presented at the conference in an edited volume.

The deadline for abstract submission (250 words max) is 27 April 2012. Please send your abstract together with a short biographical note to Katie Aston at k.aston@gold.ac.uk

Embodiment and Religion – Arc: The Journal of the Faculty of Religious Studies, McGill University

The editors of /Arc: The Journal of the Faculty of Religious Studies, McGill University/ are soliciting submissions on the theme of embodiment for the 2012 issue. Submissions could address various topics, including:

*The role of the body in religion,
*The valuation of the body as sacred or profane,
*Embodiment and personhood,
*The value of the body in the religious fulfillment of the human being,
*Theories of embodiment in religious studies,
*The role of the body in religious narratives,
*Body-centric rituals and practices,
*Gender and sexuality,
*Interdisciplinary approaches to the study of the body and religion.

/Arc/is an interdisciplinary, refereed journal published annually by the Faculty of Religious Studies, McGill University. The journal combines the talents of professors and graduate students in offering space for scholarly discussions on various aspects of the academic study of religion, including method and theory in the study of religion./Arc/encourages submissions from diverse religious traditions and perspectives.

The submission deadline is *June 15, 2012.* For detailed submission guidelines, please consult the Guidelines for Contributors <http://arcrelg.mcgill.ca/GuidelinesArc.pdf> (PDF) on our website. All electronic correspondence, including requests for review copies of books, should be sent to the editors, Richard Cumming and Ryan Jones, at the following email address: *arc.relgstud@mcgill.ca <mailto:arc.relgstud@mcgill.ca>*.

Black Church Activism and Contested Multiculturalism in Europe, North America, and Africa

Black Church Activism and Contested Multiculturalism in Europe, North America, and Africa

Birkbeck, University of London, May 29-30, 2012
This conference, which is part of an annual Transatlantic Roundtable on Religion and Race, will bring together academics, church leaders, students, and community activists to explore the role that churches play in the construction of identities in societies where issues of race and ethnicity are played out in the public sphere. Approximately fifty panelists from the U.K., France, Italy, Spain, Germany, Nigeria, South Africa, Canada, and the U.S. are scheduled to present papers on various topics related to the conference theme.

Keynote Speakers
Anthony G. Reddie
Queen’s Foundation, Birmingham
United Kingdom

Carol B. Duncan
Wilfrid Laurier University
Canada

Allan Boesak
University of Free State South Africa

Fifty Panelists, Including…

Iva Carruthers
Proctor Conference USA

Matthews A. Ojo
Obafemi Awolowo U.
Nigeria

Leah G. Fitchue
Payne Theo. Sem.
USA

Annalisa Butticci
University of Padova
Italy

Dennis C. Dickerson
Vanderbilt University
USA

Marla Frederick
Harvard University
USA

Venue: Room B36 main campus Malet Street, Bloomsbury London WC1E 7HX

http://www.bbk.ac.uk/maps

Registration:  The general registration price of 70 GBP (110 USD) (and the student price of 35 GBP/55 USD) includes the conference program pack, as well as lunch and morning and afternoon refreshments both days. Registration can be completed at the following website:
https://www2.bbk.ac.uk/bih/blackchurches.html.

Conference hotels include the Tavistock Hotel–http://www.imperialhotels.co.uk/ and YHA, Travel lodge Euston (and other
options near the college, see here: http://www.bbk.ac.uk/bih/lcts/accommodation

Contacts:

William Ackah, w.ackah@bbk.ac.uk; R. Drew Smith, rsmith@morehouse.edu; Rothney Tshaka, tshakrs@unisa.ac.za

Dr William Ackah
Programme Director Cert HE/BSc Community Development and Public Policy
Department of Social Policy and Education
Birkbeck, University of London
26 Russell Square
London WC1B 5DQ
tel 02030738354
mobile  07780707305
email w.ackah@bbk.ac.uk

International Conference: Black Church Activism and Contested Multiculturalism, in Europe, North America and South Africa 29th to 30th May 2012 at Birkbeck College University of London to register follow link below

http://www.bbk.ac.uk/bih/events/bbk-local?uid=ed83081d7eb2387fecb9afc5ed943e71

New Book: The Sacred in the City

The Sacred in the City
edited by Liliana Gómez<http://www.continuumbooks.com/authors/details.aspx?AuthorId=153382>
edited by Walter Van Herck<http://www.continuumbooks.com/authors/details.aspx?AuthorId=152761>
London/New York: Continuum, February 2012 288 Pages £ 65.00
http://www.continuumbooks.com/books/detail.aspx?BookId=159765&SearchType=Basic

The book reflects the way in which the city interacts with the sacred in all its many guises, with religion and the human search for meaning in life. As the process of urbanization of society is accelerating thus giving an increasing importance to cities and the ‘metropolis’, it is relevant to investigate the social or cultural cohesion that these urban agglomerations manifest. Religion is keenly observed as witnessing a growth, crucially impacting cultural and political dynamics, as well as determining the emergence of new sacred symbols and their inscription in urban spaces worldwide. The sacred has become an important category of a new interpretation of social and cultural transformation processes. From a unique broader perspective, the volume focuses on the relationship between the city and the sacred. Taking a multidisciplinary approach, combining the expertise of philosophers, historians, architects, social geographers, sociologists and anthropologists, it draws a nuanced picture of the different layers of religion, of the sacred and its diverse forms within the city, with examples from Europe, South America and the Caribbean, and Africa.

Table of Contents
Framing the Sacred in the City. An Introduction, Liliana Gómez & Walter van Herck \ Part I: The Sacred and the City: Theoretical Approaches \ 1.Sacred Horror Vacui. A Philosophical Reflection, Walter Van Herck\ 2.The Urbanization of Society. Towards a Cultural Analysis of the Sacred in the Modern Metropolis, Liliana Gómez\ 3.The Lingering Smell of Incense. Exploring Post-secular Public Space, Pieter Dronkers\ Part II: Religion, Built Environments and Urban Societies \ 4.Religion in the Built Environment: Aesth/Ethics, Ritual and Memory in Lived Urban Space, Sigurd Bergmann\ 5.Kinhin in a Mega-City – Implicit meanings of the ‘Walking-in-the-Park’-Movement in São Paulo, Frank Usarski \ 6. Life Stance and Religious Identity in an Urbanised World. The Meaning of Life as a Modern Predicament, Rik Pinxten & Lisa Dikomitis \ Part III: Sacred Symbols, Sacred Spaces \ 7.Sacred Symbols of the City: Babel, Barbara and Their Towers, Anne-Marie Korte \ 8.Communicating the Elemental Cosmos: The Hereford Mappa Mundi, Sacred Space and the City, Renée Köhler-Ryan \ 9.Relocating and Negotiating the Sacred: The Reception of a Chapel in a Shopping Mall, Anne Birgitta Pessi & Peter Nynäs \ Part IV: Politics of the Sacred in Contemporary Urban Spaces\ 10.Kinshasa and its (Un)Certainties: The Polis and the Sacred, Filip De Boeck \ 11. The Politics of a Sacred Place: Revisiting an Israeli Development Town, Haim Jacobi \ 12.The Sacred in the City: Havana. Alejo Carpentier or ‘Fieldwork’ in the Urban, Liliana Gómez \13. Remaking Sacred Spaces after Socialism in Ukraine, Catherine Wanner \ Index

Visualizing Global Migration Data

The Max-Planck-Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity (MPI-MMG) has launched an innovative set of online, interactive tools that allow users to examine country by country, to graphically visualize and to compare the latest and most comprehensive global migration data existing from 1960 to 2000 (with 2010 updates forthcoming). With stunning new graphics, the data visualizers are for: global migration flow data from the United Nations Population Division; global migrant stock data compiled together with the World Bank; and, also based on the latter dataset, migrants by destination – that is, the number of people from any particular country found, at any particular time, in all other countries across the world. Where the national data allows, moreover, within each visualizer online users can choose to examine migration data by citizenship or place of birth as well as by gender.

To see and use these new graphic tools, please go to the MPI-MMG homepage (www.mmg.mpg.de) and click on the heading ‘data visualization’. Each global migration data visualizer has a set of instructions and an online instruction video. A ‘feedback’ tab is also supplied for comments, questions and user examples. An FAQ section will be continuously updated and the visualization tools will be upgraded accordingly.

Bristol University Reader/Professor of Migration and Citizenship

JOB VACANCY
Reader/Professor of Migration and Citizenship (vacancy ref. 17055)

The School of Sociology, Politics and International Studies (SPAIS) intends to appoint an internationally outstanding academic to the post of Reader/Professor in Migration and Citizenship to start from October 2012.

You will have an extensive and internationally-recognised track-record of publications and grant-funded research, an outstanding teaching record, and demonstrable leadership and management skills. You will be expected to work closely with Professor Tariq Modood in providing leadership within the School’s successful Centre for Ethnicity and Citizenship, and to provide outstanding academic leadership within the School more generally.

Interviews are likely to be held in May 2012.

Grade : Level d – Level e in Pathway 1

Salary : to be determined on appointment

Contact: Professor T Osborne
E-mail: Thomas.Osborne@bristol.ac.uk
Tel: 0117 331 0574

Alternative Contact: Professor T Modood
E-mail: T.Modood@bristol.ac.uk

Closing Date : 20 April 2012
Interview Date :  not set

Timescale of Appointment(s) –
Contract : Permanent

Further details and an application form can be found at
https://www.bris.ac.uk/boris/jobs/feeds/ads?ID=109511

Alternatively you can telephone (0117) 954 6947, minicom (0117) 928 8894 or

E-Mail Recruitment@bris.ac.uk (stating postal address ONLY), quoting
reference number 17055.

The closing date for applications is 9.00am, 20 April 2012

  An Equal Opportunities Employer.

Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship
http://www.bris.ac.uk/ethnicity/

The third international scientific and practical conference – Russia

Russian Association of Buddhists of Diamond Way Karma Kagyu Tradition
The institute of History, Archaeology and Ethnography of Far East Department OF THE RUSSIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
Centre for Philosophical Comparative Studies and Social-Humanitarian Research at the Philosophy Department of Saint-Petersburg State University

LETTER OF INFORMATION
Dear colleagues! We hereby invite you to participate in the The third international scientific and practical conference VAJRAYANA BUDDHISM IN RUSSIA: AN HISTORICAL DISCOURSE AND ADJACENT CULTURES
Timeframe: September, 21-24, 2012 Venue: Vladivostok, The institute of History, Archaeology and Ethnography of Far East Department of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Pushkinskaya Street, 89

MAIN OBJECTIVES OF THE CONFERENCE: Expansion of interdisciplinary dialogue Research of Vajrayana Buddhism and its interactions with other Buddhist traditions Association and support of researchers and experts of Vajrayana

SUBJECTS FOR DISCUSSION: Buddhism in the history of Russia and adjacent countries Buddhism in the Far East Ancient Buddhist traditions on the territory of Primorsky Kray (the Bohai state and the Jin empire) Buddhism and modern sociocultural practices Forms of reception of Buddhism in the West, Russia and adjacent cultures Buddhism in the light of modern natural-science knowledge Buddhism in Russian philosophy, literature and art Mutual interaction of various Buddhist traditions in a context of their history Vajrayana methods and development of person’s intellectual and creative abilities

CONFERENCE WORKING LANGUAGES: Russian and English The conference program provides plenary and section sessions.

REGISTRATION is open on the site: www.vajra-conference.buddhism.ru
For participation in the conference please send the following files until June, 1, 2012 to the organizing committee,
veradronova@gmail.com

1. Your PRESENTATION TEST (ready for publication) in an electronic version, format Word for Windows; the font should be Times New Roman, font size 14, line spacing 1,5, the margins 2,5 sm. The volume of your article is expected to be maximum 15000 symbols. Please specify your full name and the city in parentheses before the title in the right top corner. For example: J. Smith (Rio de Janeiro). The title should be placed in the center of the next line. References to consulted and cited literature should be placed in the text, in square brackets, and contain the surname of the author of the quoted work, the publication year and the page number, all comma-separated. For example: [Smith, 2005, 214]. The List of cited publications kindly place after the end of the text alphabetically. Headers, pagination and footnotes containing references, are not permitted. Semantic clarification remarks are given in parentheses in the text. For example: Truth State (Sanskrit: Dharmakaya).
2. The ABSTRACTS in size of maximum 500 symbols in Russian and English languages.
3. A CV of the author: first name, middle initial, last name (full), scientific degree, academic status, work position, company, postal address, e-mail, contact phone. [Alternatively, you can fill the registration form on the conference site]
4. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION. Please specify if you need: – an accommodation for the period of the conference; – a full daily lunch (in addition to free coffee-breaks). It costs 200-300 rubles; – an official invitation from the Organizing committee; – special devices for the demonstration purposes.

INFORMATION FOR THE PARTICIPANTS The organizational payment for participants of conference is 500 rubles. Traveling and living expenses are to be covered by the delegating organization. After the conference the collective monograph of presentations and articles will be published. The right to select materials for publication is reserved for the Organizing committee.
THE ADDRESS OF THE ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: 190068, St.-Petersburg, Nikolsky Pereulok, 7-26
THE ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: CO-CHAIRMEN OF THE ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: Nadezhda Artemyeva – PhD in history, director of Department of Medieval Archeology in The institute of History, Archaeology and Ethnography of Far East Department of the Russian Academy of Sciences (Vladivostok). Elena Leontyeva – PhD in history, chief editor of the “Orientalia” Publishing house (Moscow)
MEMBERS OF THE ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: A.M. Alexeev-Apraksin. Grand PhD in cultural studies (St. Petersburg) V.P. Androsov, Grand PhD in history, Professor (Moscow) V.N. Badmayev, Grand PhD in philosophy, Professor (Elista) S.G. Batyreva, Grand PhD in arts (Elista) K.Sh. Khafizova, member of the Kazakh National Academy of Natural Sciences, Grand PhD in history, Professor (Almaty, Kazakhstan) A.S. Kolesnikov, Grand PhD in philosophy, Professor (St. Petersburg) V.L. Larin, Grand PhD in history, Professor (Vladivostok) A.P Zabiyako., Grand PhD in philosophy, Professor (Blagoveshchensk) N.L. Zhukovskaya, Grand PhD in history, Professor (Moscow) G.N.Chimitdorjiyeva, PhD in philology (Ulan-Ude) B.U. Kitinov, PhD in history, associate professor (Moscow) L.M.Korotetskaya, PhD in philosophy (Novosibirsk) A. Sh. Koybagarov (St. Petersburg) A.V.Lesnov, PhD in philosophy, associate professor (Magadan) E.V.Malyshkin, PhD in philosophy, associate professor (St.Petersburg) A.G Saldusova., PhD in philology (Elista) B.I. Zagumyonnov, PhD in philosophy (St. Petersburg)
COORDINATORS:
V.M. Dronova (St. Petersburg) e-mail: mailto:veradronova@gmail.com  tel.: +7 962 683 07 00; +7 911 921 20 43
A.B. Sokolov (St. Petersburg), e-mail: toleksokolov@gmail.com
THE WEB SITE OF THE CONFERENCE: http://vadjra-conference.buddhism.ru