Invitation: 22nd Nordic Conference for Sociology of Religion 2014

22ND NORDIC CONFERENCE FOR SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION 2014

Change and Continuity – Religion, State, Civil Society

We are delighted to invite you to submit proposals for sessions and papers on this theme

Date: 20 – 22 August 2014
Place: University of Copenhagen, Faculty of Humanities, Njalsgade 122, 2300 Copenhagen
Official website: http://ncsr.ku.dk/

Keynote Speakers:

  • Martin Baumann, Professor at the Study of Religions, University of Lucerne
  • Lori G. Beaman, Professor at Department for Classics and Religious Studies, University of Ottawa
  • Peter Gundelach, Professor of Sociology, University of Copenhagen
  • Viktor Yelensky, Professor at Department for the Study of Religion, The Ukrainian National Academy of Sciences

The 22nd Nordic Conference for Sociology of Religion seeks a more thorough understanding – theoretically as well as empirically – of the dynamic interrelations of religion, state and civil society. In short, we would like to find out how this interrelation is part of processes of change and continuity in society today. In line with the traditions of the Nordic conferences, contributions addressing this scope as well as other topics within the sociology of religion are welcome!

Call for Sessions: Deadline 1 November 2013
Call for Papers: Deadline 1 March 2014
Registration: Deadline 31 May 2014

Organisers: Professor, dr. phil. Margit Warburg, Assistant Professor, PhD, Brian Arly Jacobsen and Astrid Krabbe Trolle, Department of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies

Call for Papers: INFORM Conference on “Minority Religions”

CALL FOR PAPERS

Inform Anniversary Conference
MINORITY RELIGIONS:
CONTEMPLATING THE PAST AND
ANTICIPATING THE FUTURE

London School of Economics, London, UK

Friday 31st January 2014 – Sunday 2nd February 2014

Inform is celebrating over a quarter of a century of providing up-to-date and unbiased information about minority religions with an Anniversary Conference at the London School of Economics in London, UK. It will commence on the evening of Friday 31st January and continue over the weekend of February 1st and 2nd

Submissions for papers (maximum 200 word abstract and 150 word CV) on topics relevant to the title of the conference are now being accepted, please send these to inform@lse.ac.uk. The deadline for papers is 1st October 2013, with decisions by 1st November 2013. Unfortunately no subsidies can be offered to participants, who will be responsible for making their own arrangements for accommodation.

Registration will open on 1st November 2013.

Book Announcement: “Why the West Fears Islam”

Why the West Fears Islam
An Exploration of Muslims in Liberal Democracies
By Jocelyne Cesari
http://us.macmillan.com/whythewestfearsislam/JocelyneCesari
“Based on several years of empirical surveys among Muslims in Europe and the US, the book states that the current political fear of Islam cannot be explained by Muslims’ behaviors as citizens and believers. Actually, most of surveys show that Islam is a resource more than an obstacle in the social and political integration of Muslims in western societies. How then can we explain the increasing resistance to the presence of Islam in the West? Cesari identifies three main reasons that make Islam and Muslims the internal and external enemy of the West: the securitization of Islam due to the War on Terror, the specificity of European secularism that tends to reject religious manifestations from public space, and the increasing visibility of salafism, mistakenly taken as the “true” Islam by non Muslims by more and more Muslims as well”.

New Book: Diaspora Engagement in South Asia

Diaspora Engagement and Development in South Asia [Hardcover] Tan Tai Yong (Editor), Md Mizanur Rahman (Editor)
Release date: October 18, 2013 | ISBN-10:1137334444 | ISBN-13:978-1137334442
Book Description
The global South Asian diaspora is over 50 million strong. Many of its members maintain strong social, economic and cultural connections to their countries of origin. They also engage in various causes and institutions that directly benefit their countries and people in South Asia. A global cast of contributors aim to document the various forms of diaspora engagement between global South Asian diasporas and their origin countries, deepening understanding of the opportunity that these diaspora communities are hoarding for development, and providing insight on how to tap the development potential of diaspora engagement for countries in South Asia.
—————————————
Dr Md Mizanur Rahman
Senior Research Fellow
Institute of South Asian Studies
National University of Singapore
#07-01 Tower Block, 469A Bukit Timah Road
Singapore 259770; Phone: 65-65166166; Fax: 65-67767505
Email: mizan@nus.edu.sg  or rm.mizanur@yahoo.com
Website:http://www.isas.nus.edu.sg/

2nd Issue of Critical Research on Religion

  Read the second issue of Critical Research on Religion

 Editors:
Roland Boer
University of Newcastle, Australia
Jonathan Boyarin
Cornell University, USA
Warren Goldstein
Center for Critical Research on Religion and Harvard University, USA

Published three times a year: April, August, December
Available online at:
http://crr.sagepub.com

SAGE is delighted to announce publication of the second issue of Critical Research on Religion. This Special Issue, guest edited by Rhys Williams and Thomas J. Josephsohn, puts into practice a critical sociology of religion. In addition to contributions from Mary Jo Neitz, Lori G. Beaman, Jim Spickard, and others, the issue features an exchange over Jacques Berlinerblau’s new book How to Be Secular? between him, Kathryn Lofton, and William Arnal.

Critical Research on Religion is a peer-reviewed, international journal focusing on the development of a critical theoretical framework and its application to research on religion. It provides a common venue for those engaging in critical analysis in theology and religious studies, as well as for those who critically study religion in the other social sciences and humanities such as philosophy, sociology, anthropology, psychology, history, and literature.

The journal is composed of an interdisciplinary international editorial board and encourages submissions of theoretically guided articles on current issues as well as those with historical interest using a wide range of methodologies including qualitative, quantitative, and archival. It publishes articles, review essays, book reviews, thematic issues, symposia, and interviews.

If you haven’t already, please make sure to register for free online access to the first volume of Critical Research on Religion.

Articles in issue 2 include:

 Insiders, outsiders, advocates and apostates and the religions they study: Location and the sociology of religion
Mary Jo Neitz – University of Missouri, USA

The will to religion: Obligatory religious citizenship
Lori G. Beaman – University of Ottawa, Canada

Accepting the post-colonial challenge: Theorizing a Khaldûnian approach to the Marian apparition at Medjugorge
Jim Spickard – University of Redlands, USA

Access the issue’s full table of contents here.

Stay up to date with newly published Critical Research on Religion issues by signing up for free Contents Alerts.

Submission lines are open! If you are interested in submitting a paper to Critical Research on Religion please visit the Manuscript Submission webpage for guidelines.

Finally, please Like Critical Research on Religion on Facebook for updates and general news items of interest.

Symposium on Pentecostalism and Transnationalim

Dear All,

The Religion and Society Research Centre at the University of Western Sydney (UWS) invites you to attend a Symposium on Pentecostalism and Transnationalism.

The Symposium will take place on Thursday 1 August, 2013 from 1:00 PM – 5:00 PM  at UWS Bankstown Campus (Building 3 Room 55).

Andrew West from the ABC will open the event which will feature presentations by Dr Mark Hutchinson (UWS), Professor Marion Maddox (Macquarie University) and Dr Cristina Rocha (UWS).

There will also be a screening of the documentary ‘Enlarging the Kingdom: African Pentecostals in Italy’ followed by a Q&A session with one of its directors,  Dr Annalisa Butticci (Harvard).

Further details are provided in the attached flyer.

For catering purposes, we ask that you confirm your attendance with us no later than Monday 29 July via e-mail to Ms Eva Garcia (E.Garcia@uws.edu.au)

RSRC Symposium.pdf

call for papers: “Public Debates on Religious/Ethical Issues in Western Europe”

Call for papers: Public Debates on Religious/Ethical Issues in Western Europe
Alberta Giorgi, University of Coimbra, Portugal (albertagiorgi@ces.uc.pt)
Luca Ozzano, University of Turin, Italy (luca.ozzano@unito.it)

 

Panel abstract: A number of controversies related to religious issues have characterised the European public debate in recent years, at both the EU and the country members level. The ‘affaire du foulard’ in France (2004-2011), the referendum on abortion in Portugal (2007), the recognition of same-sex marriages in many Western European States – from Belgium (2003), to Spain (2005), to France (2013) –, the debate over bioethics and the regulation of euthanasia (legalized in Belgium and the Netherlands – 2002), as well as the discussion on religious pluralism and the religious roots of Europe in the EU Constitution, are only a few examples of contentious issues involving religion. All these debates have been at the centre of the political and public spheres across Europe, contributing to revive the attention towards the role of religion in contemporary societies, and highlighting the diverse forms of political secularism in Europe, but also other issues, such as the right of the national/supranational institutions to regulate matters related to the private lives of European citizens. This panel aims at analysing this recent evolution of the Western European public and political debate, by providing insights on the actors who started the debates and their interrelations, their motives and the arguments they put forward. Both single-case studies and broad comparative analyses are welcome.

 Conference on “Religion, Democracy and Law”, London Metropolitan University, 14-15 January 2014.

Sponsored by Brigham Young University, ECPR, IPSA, and The Centre for the Study of Religion, Conflict and Cooperation (London Metropolitan University).

Deadline for paper proposals: 30 August 2013.

Call for Papers: Developing a sense of belonging in diverse societies: Hui-Muslims in China and Muslims in Europe

14-15 May 2014
Gülen Chair for Intercultural Studies
KU Leuven University, Belgium
www.gcis-kuleuven.com 

Keynote Speakers:     

  • Hui-Muslims in China: Li Zhinong, Yunnan University
  • Muslims in Europe: Jorgen Nielsen, Copenhagen University

The aim of this workshop is to gather scholars who work on Hui-Muslims in China and Muslims in Europe to compare the similitudes and differences of identity practices. Hui are predominantly Chinese speaking Muslims in China’s vast territory. With a population of 10 million, they are also the most numerous recognized ethnic group in China. Muslims in Europe are hardly featured in international media, domestic politics, and scholarly discussions. Multiculturalism, radicalisation, immigration, integration, forced marriage are discussed through the Muslim visibility and presence in Europe. Recent debates on integration and secularism are focused on  the ‘Muslim question’. In contrast to the focus on Muslims in Europe, there is a notable lack of interest in Muslims in China with the exception of the Uyghur community. In this workshop, we want to study the impact of ethnic-religious interactions, state integration positions and policies to grasp the
increasing influence of religious-collective-national expression of Muslims in the public sphere. We would like to examine the new patterns of expression and visibility of the Muslims in China and Europe. Tracing Muslim’s interaction with non-Muslims, this workshop investigates how Muslims encounters, accommodates and negotiates into different socio political contexts in China and Europe.

A comparison between China and Europe provides a guide for analysis of different models. The workshop looks at the modes of organization of Muslims, their identity demands, social-cultural and religious dynamics of solidarity.

To examine Muslims’ ethnic-religious identifications in contemporary China and Europe, and trace in which ways Muslims develop a sense of belonging to the wider society, this international workshop will broadly focus (but also restrain the focus) on two topics: (1) the collective memory and identification of Muslims and (2) the interaction of Muslims with the local communities and the State.

  • Creating Collective Memory and Identity (through festivals, food, other trivial identity markers): This part looks at the Muslim way of life and their practices within different contexts to understand how a Muslim memory is shaped and constructed. In this regard, we want to analyze the circulation of narratives, translocal practices among Muslims in Europe and in China to seek whether they create new patterns-mixtures of their self-presentation. As Muslims are not homogeneous groups both in Europe and China, ethnic-religious diversity enforces the diversification of Muslim identity and practices within various secular-national contexts. The aim is to observe the daily practices, narratives and strategies to figure out the dynamics through which Muslims formulate their self.
  • Relations with other local ethnic-religious communities and with the State (exchange with different faith people, institutions, public authorities, citizenship models etc.) In this part, we want to understand the interaction of Muslims with non-Muslims, local communities and the state to adjust and to maintain their cultural-religious identity. The capacity of adjusting religious-political identity enables to study the citizenship rhetoric, community dynamics, and institutional structures. The different modes of dynamics between Muslims, non-Muslims and the State constitute the possible ways of pluralism and co-existence of differences. We examine the specific strategies and policies developed by Muslims and authorities to negotiate the citizenship and integration models.

Tuition Fees: There is no tuition fee for participants in the workshop programme. However, presenters and participants are expected to pay the costs of their travel and accommodation. The organizers have a reduced prize from ‘La Royale’ hotel in Leuven. The GCIS covers the meals and transportation in Belgium during the workshop.

Outcome:

  • A proceedings book of the workshop will be printed and distributed in advance of the workshop itself.
  • Within six months à maximum 1 year of the event, an edited book will be produced and published by the GCIS with Leuven University Press, comprising some or all of the papers presented at the Workshop, at the condition that they pass a peer review organized by the publisher. The papers will be arranged and introduced, and to the extent appropriate, edited, by scholar(s) to be appointed by the Editorial Board.
  • Copyright of the papers accepted to the Workshop will be vested in the GCIS.

Selection Criteria:
The workshop will accept up to 15 participants, each of whom must meet the following requirements:

  • have a professional and/or research background in related topics of the workshop;
  • be able to attend the entire programme.

Since the Workshop expects to address a broad range of topics while the number of participants has to be limited, writers submitting abstracts are requested to bear in mind the need to ensure that their language is technical only where it is absolutely necessary and the language should be intelligible to non-specialists and specialists in disciplines other than their own; and present clear, coherent arguments in a rational way and in accordance with the usual standards and format for publishable work.

Timetable

  1. Abstracts (300–500 words maximum) and CVs (maximum 1 page) to be received by 1st October 2013.
  2. Abstracts to be short-listed by the Editorial Board and papers invited by 7th October 2013.
  3. Papers (3,000 words minimum – 5,500 words maximum, excluding bibliography) to be received by 1st March 2014.
  4. Papers reviewed by the Editorial Board and classed as: Accepted – No Recommendations; Accepted – See Recommendations; Conditional Acceptance – See Recommendations; Not Accepted, by 20th March 2014.
  5. Final papers to be received by 15th April 2014.

Workshop Coordinators: Erkan Toguslu, KU Leuven; Ding Yuan, Yunnan University – KU Leuven

Venue: KU Leuven University
The international workshop is organized by KU Leuven Gülen Chair for Intercultural Studies and Research Center for Studies of Chinese Southwest’s Borderland Ethnic Minorities of Yunnan University. It will be entirely conducted in English and will be hosted by KU Leuven Gülen Chair in Leuven.

Papers and abstract should be sent to Erkan Toguslu: erkan.toguslu@soc.kuleuven.be

For more information please contact:
Erkan Toguslu
KU Leuven Gülen Chair for Intercultural Studies
Parkstraat 45 – box 3615
3000 Leuven

2014 ISORECEA conference – call for papers

CALL FOR PAPERS
11th ISORECEA conference
RELIGIOUS DIVERSIFICATION WORLDWIDE AND IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE Kaunas, Lithuania, April 24-27, 2014

http://www.isorecea.net/

For a long time the secularization thesis dominated the field of studies of religions in contemporary societies. Many definitions and even more explanations of the process of secularization in contemporary societies led scholars of religions to search for new theoretical insights about the rapidly changing global social situation. Opponents of this paradigm claim that we are witnessing growing religious vitality at religious market or change in religion itself – here we find the privatization thesis, precarious religion or religious bricolage. Independently of how we approach it from theoretical perspective religious diversification is the process that is evident in the majority of contemporary societies. It is manifested through numerous religious traditions and new emerging religious communities not only within the religious traditions, but also at the individual level, as well as by the increasing number of non-believers and non-adherents, etc.
In many cases Central and Eastern European societies have been analyzed as places where the monopoly of scientific atheism was replaced by the monopolies of national churches. But after more than twenty years of the post-communist period, religious diversification processes within these societies is visibly emerging, despite the fact that the dominance of the so-called national churches is still obvious.
How do worldwide and CEE societies adapt to religious diversification? How do religious communities approach the diversification of religion? How do states react towards the changing situation? How do worldwide and CEE societies differ from each other in relation to religious diversification?

We would like to approach these questions in the forthcoming international conference and to encourage scholars from various parts of the world to share their theoretical and empirical insights about religious diversification.

In this conference we also invite discussion of the following topics:

– Religious diversification and Church and State relations;
– Religious tolerance and discrimination;
– Religious minorities and majorities;
– Religious diversification and human rights;
– Religious diversification and social participation;
– Religious diversification and social exclusion;
– Religious diversification and media;
– Religiosity or Spirituality – within or outside religious institutions.

Please submit a 250-300 words abstract of your presentation by e-mail to: isorecea2014@smf.vdu.lt by November 15, 2013. If you are interested in another topic related to the study of religion in the CEE or worldwide, we encourage you to organize a session/panel. In this case, please submit a 200-300 words proposal by November 15, 2013 to the same email address.

ISORECEA 2014 – CFP_final.pdf

“Social Compass: Appel a contributions de la conférence de 2013”.

Le Comité éditorial de la SISR vous encourage à soumettre le(s) papier(s) que vous avez présenté(s) en français ou en anglais à la 32ème Conférence de la SISR à Turku, en vue d’une éventuelle publication dans Social Compass 2015 (2).

Veuillez noter que Social Compass publie exclusivement des articles originaux, c’est-à-dire des papiers qui n’ont encore fait l’objet d’aucune autre publication et ce, en quelque langue que ce soit.

Lors de la préparation de votre papier, veuillez suivre les instructions qui suivent :

Envoyez une version électronique avant le 15 novembre 2013 à la Présidente du Comité éditorial Véronique Altglas (v.altglas@qub.ac.uk).

  1. La première page doit contenir le titre du papier, le nom de l’auteur, son affiliation institutionnelle, son adresse postale, ses numéros de téléphone et de fax en son adresse mèl.
  2. Les articles d’une longueur totale maximale de 6.000 mots, compris : le résumé/the abstract (150 mots en français et anglais), la notice biographique de l’auteur (100 mots), les notes, la bibliographie et les tableaux. Les tableaux doivent être présentés sur des feuilles séparées, attachées à la fin du texte. Tapé ou imprimé votre texte en double interligne dans un caractère qui ne peut pas être plus petit que 12.
  3. Les références dans le corps du texte doivent suivre le système ‘nom +date’. Veuillez suivre le modèle utilisé dans Social Compass.

Véronique Altglas, Présidente du Comité Editorial de la SISR
School of Sociology, Social Policy and Social Work,
Queen’s University Belfast,
Belfast BT7 1NN,
United Kingdom