CFP: Special Issue on “Performing Religion”

Call for submissions:

Performance Matters 3.1 (May 2017)

Special issue on “Performing Religion”

Performance and religion, both as practices and as fields of study, overlap. In religious studies, performance theory has provided a way to understand ritual as action with performative force (Tambiah 1979; Hollywood 2002), while a shared interest in ritual fueled the exchanges between Richard Schechner and Victor Turner from which grew one branch of performance studies as a discipline. Less explicitly, a reverence among performance theorists for theater’s transformational potential and performance’s politically liberatory power inspires some of the field’s foundational work (Dolan 2005; Phelan 1993). These commitments in turn draw strength from a long scholarly tradition that traces the mutually constitutive histories of theater and religion. In performance studies, a growing body of recent scholarship has reinvigorated the question of what it means to perform religion. Unlike earlier performance research which tended to downplay the religious aspects of ritual practice, this newer work focuses directly on religious activities like worship, private devotion, preaching, evangelization, and veneration. Whether analyzing onstage manifestations of Krishna (Mason 2009), evangelical dramaturgy (Stevenson 2013), proselytization as activist performance (Fletcher 2013), or occult theater (Lingan 2014), this work examines the theatrical and performance strategies of religious communities and movements. In doing so, it raises a series of disciplinary and methodological questions. What are the advantages and pitfalls of using theater and performance as analytical frameworks for studying religious activity? To what degree does ritual still occupy the middle ground between religious studies and performance studies? How might greater dialogue between scholars in these two fields enrich research on religious performance? In the interest of pursuing these and other related questions, Performance Matters invites papers that draw on performance theory, theater metaphors and the tools of performance analysis or creation to conduct research on religious practices, texts, histories, philosophies, or phenomena.

Interested contributors are asked to send short abstracts and paper proposals (250 words) to joy_palacios@sfu.ca by July 30, 2016.

Reviews of relevant performances or theatrical productions, as well as of books related to the theme of religious performance, are also invited, as are short position statements for a forum section featuring scholars in performance studies who work on religion and scholars in religious studies who think about performance.

Invited full papers will then be due by November 30, 2016.

Performance Matters is a peer-reviewed, open access, on-line journal published bi-annually by Simon Fraser University that focuses on all aspects of performance: what it does, and why it is meaningful. For more information, see http://performancematters-thejournal.com.

CFP: Special Issue on “Performing Religion”

Call for submissions:

Performance Matters 3.1 (May 2017)

Special issue on “Performing Religion”

Performance and religion, both as practices and as fields of study, overlap. In religious studies, performance theory has provided a way to understand ritual as action with performative force (Tambiah 1979; Hollywood 2002), while a shared interest in ritual fueled the exchanges between Richard Schechner and Victor Turner from which grew one branch of performance studies as a discipline. Less explicitly, a reverence among performance theorists for theater’s transformational potential and performance’s politically liberatory power inspires some of the field’s foundational work (Dolan 2005; Phelan 1993). These commitments in turn draw strength from a long scholarly tradition that traces the mutually constitutive histories of theater and religion. In performance studies, a growing body of recent scholarship has reinvigorated the question of what it means to perform religion. Unlike earlier performance research which tended to downplay the religious aspects of ritual practice, this newer work focuses directly on religious activities like worship, private devotion, preaching, evangelization, and veneration. Whether analyzing onstage manifestations of Krishna (Mason 2009), evangelical dramaturgy (Stevenson 2013), proselytization as activist performance (Fletcher 2013), or occult theater (Lingan 2014), this work examines the theatrical and performance strategies of religious communities and movements. In doing so, it raises a series of disciplinary and methodological questions. What are the advantages and pitfalls of using theater and performance as analytical frameworks for studying religious activity? To what degree does ritual still occupy the middle ground between religious studies and performance studies? How might greater dialogue between scholars in these two fields enrich research on religious performance? In the interest of pursuing these and other related questions, Performance Matters invites papers that draw on performance theory, theater metaphors and the tools of performance analysis or creation to conduct research on religious practices, texts, histories, philosophies, or phenomena.

Interested contributors are asked to send short abstracts and paper proposals (250 words) to joy_palacios@sfu.ca by July 30, 2016.

Reviews of relevant performances or theatrical productions, as well as of books related to the theme of religious performance, are also invited, as are short position statements for a forum section featuring scholars in performance studies who work on religion and scholars in religious studies who think about performance.

Invited full papers will then be due by November 30, 2016.

Performance Matters is a peer-reviewed, open access, on-line journal published bi-annually by Simon Fraser University that focuses on all aspects of performance: what it does, and why it is meaningful. For more information, see http://performancematters-thejournal.com.

Call for Special Issue – Islam in the 21st Century: Challenges & Opportunities for Social Work with Muslims

JOURNAL OF
RELIGION & SPIRITUALITY IN
SOCIAL WORK:
SOCIAL THOUGHT

www.tandfonline.com/WRSP

Affiliated with the Society for
Spirituality and Social Work

http://societyforspiritualityandsocialwork.com/


Call for Special Issue
ISLAM IN THE 21ST CENTURY:
CHALLENGES & OPPORTUNITIES
FOR SOCIAL WORK WITH MUSLIMS

Guest Editor, Altaf Husain, PhD, Howard University School of Social Work
Deadline: June 15, 2016

This special issue aims to fill the gaps in the existing literature on social work education, practice and research with Muslims, with a particular focus on the examination of issues of social justice and Islam, and the concomitant impact of Islamic teachings on the development of policy and the delivery of social services. The special issue is intended to allow prospective authors the latitude to delve deeper into the role of Islam in the daily lives of potential clients and in the healthy functioning of organizations and communities.

Conceptual, research-based, and practice-oriented articles are being solicited in these four broad areas:
1. Islamic beliefs and values;
2. Micro direct practice;
3. Macro direct practice; and
4. Best practices in serving Muslim clients, organizations and communities.

Guiding questions to assist with the development of original manuscripts include:

• What does the Islamic philosophy of social work look like? Is there such a philosophy?
• What are the key Islamic beliefs and values which are central to ensuring spiritual competence among social work professionals working with Muslim clients?
How does the Islamic belief system align with the values and ethics of the social work profession?
• How are mental health and psychosocial wellbeing defined, interpreted and addressed according to the Islamic teachings?
How has anti-Islamic bigotry impacted individuals and communities?
• How is community defined and what unique principles of community organizing and development can be discerned from the Islamic tradition?
What best practices have emerged within social work education, practice and research with the Muslim population?

DOWNLOAD THE COMPLETE CALL FOR PAPERS or share electronically with colleagues – click here.


Manuscript Submissions
JRSSW Now on ScholarOne


In the Journal of Religion & Spirituality in Social Work: Social Thought, scholars, researchers, and practitioners examine the integration and impact of religion and spirituality on social work practice at the micro, mezzo, and macro levels. The Journal receives all manuscript submissions electronically via its ScholarOne Manuscripts site located at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/wrsp. ScholarOne Manuscripts allows for rapid submission of original and revised manuscripts, and facilitates the review process and internal communication between authors, editors, and reviewers via a web-based platform. If you have any other requests, please contact Linda Plitt Donaldson, Editor-in-Chief, at DONALDSON@cua.edu.

For complete Instructions for Authors – click here.

Submit online – click here.


NEW – Open Access Article
Download in PDF format or view in HTML format.

The Development of a Concept Map for Understanding Spiritual Integration in Evangelically Based Social Service Organizations, John Ridings

PARTIAL ABSTRACT: The role that spirituality and religion play in the delivery of social services in faith-based organizations is a relative unknown. Specifically, what remain missing are well-defined operational indicators that cover the continuum of spiritual integration. This article describes results from a study using concept mapping to create a conceptual model of spiritual integration for The Salvation Army in Chicago. . . . This research presents a conceptualization of spiritual integration and identifies the constituent domains. Findings may help focus programmatic and research efforts, leading to the development of measures that open the field for further research and theory generation.

OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE – download today.


Call for Chapters – Global Perspectives on Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage

Dear Colleagues,

 

Currently, I am in the process of editing “Global Perspectives on Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage” which will be published by the American publisher IGI Global (www.igi-global.com) and is scheduled for release in 2017.

 

I am delighted to invite you to consider submitting a chapter for the book.

 

The main objective of this book is to add to the limited accumulated knowledge in the field of religious tourism through providing readers with information on the international perspectives as well as the most current religious tourism practices used in both developed and developing countries. The book will also raise the level of awareness on the main studies carried out in the field of religious tourism and their corresponding findings. As a result, the book will help researchers and scholars in the field of religious tourism to have a clearer view towards this concept that in turn will contribute to the related accumulated knowledge in the field. The book aims to cover all related international perspectives on religious tourism (to include perspectives on Islamic Tourism as well as Christian Tourism, Hindu Tourism, Buddhist Tourism, Jewish Tourism, etc.,).

 

Chapters may focus on theoretical or conceptual research, empirical full-scale research, case studies, and/or best-practices-related or applied religious tourism activities in developed and developing countries. Recommended potential topics to be included in this book are (but not limited to) the following potential topics:

o   Religious Tourism

o   Pilgrimage

o   Islamic Tourism

o   Christian Tourism

o   Hindu Tourism

o   Buddhist Tourism

o   Jewish Tourism

o   Religious Tourism Trends,

o   Religious Tourism Practices

o   Religious Tourism Customers Behaviour

o   Religious Tourism Challenges

o   Religious Tourism Opportunities

o   Religious Tourism Concepts

o   Religious Tourism Destinations

o   Religious Tourism Firms

o   Religious Tourism Tools

o   International Perspectives of Religious Tourism

 

 

All the needed information regarding the book can be found on the following link: http://www.igi-global.com/publish/call-for-papers/call-details/2121

 

Researchers and practitioners are invited to submit on or before April 15, 2016, a chapter proposal clearly explaining the mission and concerns of the proposed chapter, including a summary, preliminary outline, and explanation of the main contribution the chapter will make. Chapters’ proposals can be submitted online through the following link: http://www.igi-global.com/publish/call-for-papers/call-details/2121

 

Your kind professional involvement will greatly benefit the success of the book.

 

Best regards,

 

Professor Hatem El-Gohary

PhD, MSc, MRes, BSc, PGCHE, Chartered Marketer, MCIM, CeM, CSMA, HEA Fellow, AABPP Fellow, CMI Fellow.

 

Professor of Marketing

Editor in Chief: International Journal of Online Marketing

Head of BCBS Enterprise, Finance and Marketing Research Group

Faculty of Business, Law and Social Sciences, Birmingham City University,

City Centre Campus, Curzon Building, Room C236, 4 Cardigan Street, B4 7BD, Birmingham, UK.

Tel: 0044 121 202 4616

E-mail: hatem.elgohary@bcu.ac.uk

CFP Special Issue of New Diversities: Religion and Migration in Africa and the African Diaspora

Guest editors: Dr Federico Settler (University of KwaZulu-Natal), Prof Trygve Wyller (University of Oslo), and Dr Mari Engh (University of KwaZulu-Natal)

As the field of transnational and migration studies has burgeoned, research about Africa has remained under-represented, and often Africa is depicted as the place from where people flee from in pursuit of liberty and modernity in the ‘North’. Recent decades has seen a great deal of scholarship in the field of migration focused on movement from the global South to the North, with most studies characterised by sentiments oriented around social exclusion, integration, multiculturalism, and ethnic relations.

In this special issue of the New Diversities Journal (http://newdiversities.mmg.mpg.de/) we wish to include papers that qualitatively explore the religious lives (Islam, African Pentecostalism, Hinduism, and Indigenous Religions) of migrants in Africa and the African Diaspora. The special issue is premised on the idea that when people move, they take their religions and cultural identities with them. In this, migrants make use of, and form, religious communities as networks of support, trust and knowledge, and to accumulate material knowledge of regulations, languages, expectations, desirable jobs, and settlement.

We invite papers concerned with the intersections of religion, migration and transnationalism in African contexts and in African diasporas across the world. We are interested in submissions that consider a cross-section of migratory aspirations, legal status, or extent of integration into the host society. Locating reflections within a postcolonial perspective, we invite contributions that are not simply concerned with migration as a strategy for fleeing from war, patriarchal relations and societies, and/or under-development, but that draw attention to the ways in which religion is produced and used in the migratory processes of people from and within postcolonial societies. We invite papers that provide an analysis of the ways in the religious beliefs and practices of migrants are resources for articulating, obtaining and maintaining transnational mobilities. Ultimately, through this special issue we hope to not only explore the ways in which religious beliefs, affiliations and practices shape migration, but also significantly, how migratory processes shapes our understandings of what constitutes religion, and religious work and practice.

Please submit abstracts (of approx 750 words) via email to Dr. FG Settler (settler@ukzn.ac.za) no later than 15th March 2016.

Schedule:

Submission of abstracts by 15th March 2016

Notification of abstracts selected for full paper submission by 1st April 2016

Submission of full papers by 1st July 2016

Final decision on manuscripts by 15th October

CFP: Iranian Cosmopolitanism

Call for Paper: Iranian Cosmopolitanism
Special Issue, Journal of Comparative Islamic Studies
https://journals.equinoxpub.com/index.php/CIS

Journal Editor: Ulrika Mårtensson, The Norwegian University of Science
and Technology Special Issue Editors: Milad Odabaei, University of
California, Berkeley, and Christopher Cochran, University of California,
Santa Cruz

This call for paper invites contributions that will provide theoretical advancements
in understanding textual, conceptual, historical and sociological contours of “Iranian
Cosmopolitanism.” The need for theoretical advancement is propelled by the dilemma
intrinsic to theorization of non-European cosmopolitanisms. Conceptions of
“cosmopolitanism” destabilize the demarcations of terrestrial fixities and invite us to
consider the political and ethical significance of the movement of peoples, things and ideas
that exceed the constitution of territorial identities. At the same time, however,
cosmopolitanism’s political and ethical registers are indebted to the vicissitudes of
philosophical and religious traditions that underlie the identity of Europe. Inevitably, the
analysis of the “cosmopolitanism” of non-Europeans, as in Iran, put forward sociological
determinations with a European genealogy. When European sociological determinations
are reflected back into the object of study, in this case Iran, the conclusion too easily
appears that the cosmopolitanism of Iran, if it exists, comes to Iran from Europe. Hence,
many scholars have resigned to always tracing cosmopolitanism back to Europe, where it
is conceptually at home, while others ignore this dilemma, risking disavowal so they may
better express the actuality of non-European expression of cosmopolitanism.

Highlighting this dilemma, we seek both case studies and theoretical considerations
that bear on the conceptualization of “Iranian cosmopolitanism.” Particularly, we invite
studies of religious traditions, and the place of religion in Iranian statecraft that inform
Iranian cosmopolitanism and its ethical and political registers. We wonder what political
and religious traditions, textual flows, concepts and exchanges can make possible dialogue
with the European concept of cosmopolitanism, perhaps bending or even breaking its
meaning as a result, and bringing forth singularities that may be otherwise hidden. If
instead such a dialogue is found to be unattainable, we ask scholars to theorize its
impossibility. What are the unique ways in which religious traditions relate to Iranian
politics, statecraft and empire at different moments of Iranian development and decline?
What is the relation between political and religious belonging in Iran? Do they coincide?
Does one trump or engender the other? Or is political belonging defined independently of
religious affiliation? Contributors’ case studies may elaborate religious pasts and occulted
presences that express belonging to both Iran and to a world that extends beyond Iran. They
may put forth concepts and theories that have garnered to shape a political authority that
can be properly identified as Iranian, and thereby at the same time provide contours of an
Iran that belongs within a world that exceeds its own identity.

We invite papers that explore classical Iranian political and religious traditions; the
Iranian satrapy model, its regulation of religious difference and its expansion throughout
the Islamic world; the significance of Zoroastrianism in pre-Islamic Iran, its lives as a
minor religion in Iran and in the Indian subcontinent, and its afterlives within the Islamic
tradition and Iranian politics; the development of Islamic tradition and Greek philosophy
in Iran and Iranian milieus in the medieval period; the genres of ethical and political
treaties; the “mirror of the prince” advice literature; Shi’a tradition as it develops in Iranian
milieus and at the same time, extends beyond Iranian political borders. In the course of
their elaborations, contributors might also address Iran’s particular geographical location
on the Eurasian continent; its religious and political reformulations and reinvention by
moments of conquest, destruction and/or decline; its centrality in medieval trade; its
religious and political developments amidst Iranian tajadod, “renewal,” or “modernity” in
the nineteenth century; Iran’s peculiar relation to colonization and imperial domination of
the Middle East and North Africa; its articulation of reformist and revolutionary Islam in
the late nineteenth and twentieth century and around the Constitutional Revolution of 1906
and the Islamic Revolution of 1979. Contributors may investigate the vocabularies and
grammar of difference, which correspond to the various and intersecting registers of
plurality, and condition the possibilities and limits of belonging to Iran. They might do so,
for example, by considering the historical Persian Jewish community; the rise and
persecution of Babism and the Bahai faith in nineteenth century; the Kurdish and Azari
Yarsanis or Sunni Turkmans in the present. Lastly, contributors may investigate the sources
of continuity and discreteness of Iranian historical consciousness across time.
Abstracts of up to 300 words should be submitted to Milad Odabaei and Christopher
Cochran at milado@berkeley.edu by March 1, 2016.
The contributors will hear from the editors by March 15, 2016. The deadline for article submission is September 15, 2016. The articles, including all notes, are expected to be
between 6000-8000 words in length and follow the journal’s style guide

CFP: Islam of the Global West

Islam of the Global West is a pioneering series that examines Islamic beliefs,
practices, discourses, communities, and institutions that have emerged from ‘the
Global West.’ The geographical and intellectual framing of the Global West
reflects both the role played by the interactions between people from diverse
religions and cultures in the development of Western ideals and institutions in
the modern era, and the globalizations of these very ideals and institutions. In
creating an intellectual space where works of scholarship on European and North
American Muslims enter into
conversation with one another, the series promotes the publication of
theoretically informed and empirically grounded research in these areas. By
bringing the rapidly growing research on Muslims in European and North American
societies, ranging from the United States and France to Portugal and Albania,
into conversation with the conceptual framing of the Global West, this ambitious
series aims to reimagine the modern world and develop new analytical categories
and historical narratives that highlight the complex relationships and rivalries
that have shaped the multicultural, poly‐religious character of Europe and North
America.

SERIES EDITORS
Kambiz GhaneaBassiri, Reed College, USA ghaneabk@reed.edu
Frank Peter, Hamad bin Khalifa University, Qatar fpeter@qfis.edu.qa

EDITORIAL BOARD
Leila Ahmed, Harvard Divinity School, USA
Schirin Amir‐Moazami, Freie University Berlin, Germany
John Bowen, Washington University in St. Louis, USA
Xavier Bougarel, Centre nationale de la recherche scientifique (CNRS), France
Ian Coller, University of California, Irvine, USA
Edward E. Curtis IV, Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, USA
Mercedes García‐Arenal, Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales CSIC, Madrid,
Spain
Sophie Gilliat‐Ray, Cardiff University, Wales, UK
Riva Kastoryano, Centre de Recherches Internationales, SciencesPo, France
Aisha Khan, New York University, USA
Andrew March, Yale University, USA
Sean McLoughlin, University of Leeds, UK
Anne Sofie Roald, Malmö University, Sweden
Mark Sedgwick, Aarhus University, Denmark

CONFIRMED VOLUMES SO FAR
Pooyan Tamimi Arab: Amplifying Islam in the European Soundscape. 2017.

CFP: Alternative Religiosities in the Soviet Union and the Communist East-Central Europe

CALL FOR PAPERS

for the topical issue of Open Theology journal

Alternative Religiosities in the Soviet Union and the Communist East-Central Europe:

Formations, Resistances and Manifestations

Open Theology (http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/opth) invites submissions for the topical issue “Alternative Religiosities in the Soviet Union and the Communist East-Central Europe: Formations, Resistances and Manifestations”, under the general editorship of Dr. Rasa Pranskevičiūtė and Dr. Eglė Aleknaitė (Vytautas Magnus University).

DESCRIPTION

After the boom of traditional religions (i. e. prevailing national religions or those that have a relatively long history in a particular country) and alternative religious movements (i. e. religious movements that offer an alternative to the traditional religion(s) in a particular country) in post-communist/post-socialist countries, the religion(s) of this area have gained increasing scholarly attention. Research on the religious situation during the prior communist/socialist period is primarily focused on restrictions placed on traditional religions and their survival strategies, while the corresponding phenomena of the alternative religious of that time still lack proper analysis.

The special issue invites papers that address alternative religiosities in the communist/socialist countries up to 1990. Due to Soviet control, they mostly existed underground and could remain only if expressed clandestinely. Beside the officially-established Soviet culture, connected with the Communist Party’s aim to control all aspects of the public sphere, there was an unofficial cultural field that was very receptive to the arrival, formation, spread and expressions of diverse alternative religiosities and spiritualities. The disappointment with the existing narrowness of the official communist ideology and the loss of the absolute allegiance to it led to the formation and rise of unofficial socio-cultural alternatives within the system. The underground activities, including access to alternative spiritual and esoteric ideas and practices, generally existed in parallel, or even jointly, with the official culture and institutions.

We invite religious scholars, historians, anthropologists, as well as authors representing other disciplines, to submit both empirical and theoretical papers including, but not limited to the following topics:

• Networks and inter-community connections

• Flows of ideas within the Soviet Union and communist East-Central Europe and from the outside

• Centers and peripheries of the milieu of alternative religiosity in the region

• Politics and actions of the regime towards alternative religiosity

• Restrictions, repressions and survival strategies of practitioners of alternative religiosity

• Milieu of alternative religiosity as a space of resistance

• Relationships of communities of alternative religiosity with dominant religious traditions

• Theoretical frameworks and methodological problems in research on alternative religiosities within the Soviet Union and the communist East-Central European region

Authors publishing their articles in the special issue will benefit from:

  • transparent, comprehensive and fast peer review
  •  efficient route to fast-track publication and full advantage of De Gruyter Open’s e-technology,
  •  no publication fees,
  • free language assistance for authors from non-English speaking regions.

HOW TO SUBMIT

Submissions are due June 30, 2016. To submit an article for the special issue of Open Theology, authors are asked to access the on-line submission system at: http://www.editorialmanager.com/openth/

Please choose as article type: “Special Issue Article: Alternative Religiosities”.

Before submission the authors should carefully read over the Instruction for Authors, available at: http://www.degruyter.com/view/supplement/s23006579_Instruction_for_Authors.pdf

All contributions will undergo critical review before being accepted for publication.

Further questions about this thematic issue can be addressed to Dr. Rasa Pranskevičiūtė at Rasa.Pranskeviciute@degruyteropen.com or Dr. Eglė Aleknaitė at ealeknaite@yahoo.com. In case of technical questions, please contact journal Managing Editor Dr. Katarzyna Tempczyk at katarzyna.tempczyk@degruyteropen.com

CFP: Religion and Belief in the Public Sphere of Eastern Europe

Culture and Society: Journal of Social Research
Call for Papers for Special Issue on:
Religion and Belief in the Public Sphere of Eastern Europe

Guest Editors:
Milda Alisauskiene, Department of Sociology, Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania
Email: m.alisauskiene@smf.vdu.lt
Panagiotis Pentaris, Faiths & Civil Society Unit, Department of Social, Therapeutic & Community Studies, Goldsmiths University of London, UK
Email: p.pentaris@gold.ac.uk

Summary
The role of religion in Eastern Europe has seen recent and most significant changes. The atheist doctrine of the socialist period was overcome between the years 1989 and 1991 (Gerlach & Töpfer 2015). Such change interplayed with public life, while religion and belief found various and different roles in society, usually more apparent. This period enhanced the notion of ‘freedom of religion and belief’ (Gerlach & Töpfer 2015). Nonetheless, contemporary societies in Eastern Europe experience a heterogeneous religious landscape. The population’s religious and belief identities grow diverse as we move on in the 21st century. The current makeup of the society also depicts new challenges and controversies in different spheres of public life. The role of religion and belief has also changed while non-belief and the contested notions of secularity have gained much attention in discourse and personal belief, both.
In light of the changes mentioned above, legislation should be addressing these exigent issues and provide appropriate frameworks to accommodate the religious difference in the public sphere. Nonetheless, social policy need be informed by current and ever-changing demographics, as well as how the current religious landscape is playing out in different spheres of public life (also see, Dinham & Francis 2015).
The present special issue draws attention to the growing religious diversity in Eastern Europe and its implications in public life. The collection of the articles calls for enhancement of the discourse in the sociology of religion and study of religions in Eastern Europe.
The aim of this special issue is dual; to further explore the changing religious landscape in Eastern Europe. Also, it seeks to unpack the role of religion and belief in public life, and how that plays out in politics, policy, and everyday practices. Therefore, the guest-editors are inviting papers that will address these issues, and will add to the discourses of the sociology of religion in Eastern Europe.

Please express your interest by submitting a 300-word abstract of your proposed work to the guest editors (contact details provided above), by the 28th of February 2016. With your submission, please include your affiliation and contact details. Notifications of acceptance and invitations to submit the first draft will follow in March 2016.

Timeline:
25/01/16: CFPs is disseminated/published.
28/02/16: Expression of interest from potential contributors & submission of 300 word abstracts to guest editors.
March 2016: Notification of acceptance & invitations to submit first draft.
30/06/16: 1st draft submission for internal reviews.
31/07/16: notifications of reviewers’ comments to authors.
30/09/16: Submission of final version of manuscripts for publication.
30/11/16: Final special issue manuscript submission to Culture and Society.
Spring 2017: Publication of the special issue.

For more information about the journal, see: http://culturesociety.vdu.lt.

CFP for New Editors of Politics & Religion

Politics and Religion
Call for Proposals for New Editor(s)

The Religion and Politics section of the American Political Science Association invites applications from individuals, pairs, or teams for the editorship of Politics and Religion (P&R) from January 1, 2017, through December 31, 2021. Nominations and self-nominations are encouraged. The section particularly encourages nomination of pairs or teams of editors where each editor represents a different country and a variety of substantive expertise.
Interested applicants for editor should be senior scholars and members in good standing of the Religion and Politics section. Applicants are expected to have records of significant research accomplishment in the subfield of Religion and Politics, intellectual breadth and depth, an entrepreneurial approach to attracting and soliciting quality manuscripts, authors, and reviewers, and excellent administrative, organizational, and interpersonal skills.

information for candidates
Politics and Religion is the flagship journal for the subfield of Religion and Politics, published by Cambridge University Press. P&R receives close to 100 submissions per year and continues to grow. As a result, serving as editor requires substantial commitments of time, intellectual effort, and management skill. It also offers an opportunity to shape the intellectual direction of the journal and the field.
The P&R editor reports to the Executive Committee of the Religion and Politics Section of APSA and to the Publishing Editor at Cambridge University Press. The editor will appoint book review editors and journal editorial board members in consultation with the section’s executive committee. The editor is required to provide at least one written report per year on the state of the journal, in addition to frequent informal consultation with the section and CUP. Cambridge University Press provides a stipend to the editor each year to defray some of the administration costs of the journal.

to Apply
Candidates should e-mail a single PDF that includes a full curriculum vita, a letter of intent or proposal that discusses vision and goals for the journal, particularly addressing the challenge of balancing international politics, American politics, comparative politics, and political philosophy in an outlet for Religion and Politics research; experiences directly relevant to the position of editor; plans for management, and organization of the journal’s workflow; and statements of financial support commitments from the host university(ies).
Applications should be sent to Elizabeth Shakman Hurd (eshurd@northwestern.edu), Religion and Politics section chair, and must be received no later than 5:00 p.m. CT on Tuesday, March 15, 2016.
All applicants will receive e-mail confirmation.
Nominations and Questions: If you wish to nominate a person to serve as editor, you may contact Elizabeth Shakman Hurd who, in turn, will contact the nominee. If you have questions about the responsibilities of serving as editor of Politics and Religion you are encouraged to contact the chair of the Religion and Politics section committee.