SSRC Job Opening

The Social Science Research Council (SSRC) seeks a Program Officer or Program Coordinator to work with the Council’s Program on Religion and the Public Sphere. The Program Officer/Coordinator will work closely with the Program Director on a variety of program management and development activities. S/he will also be responsible for a range of social media and communications activities emanating from the program’s various projects and will play a central editorial and managerial role for two digital publications (The Immanent Frame and Reverberations).

Qualifications include a PhD, MA, or professional degree with relevance to the social sciences, humanities, or a closely related field of study. Demonstrated achievement in editorial/communications-oriented work is strongly preferred, as is academic training or interest in religion.

Annual salary will be commensurate with qualifications and experience. Comprehensive benefits include health, prescription, dental, vision, disability, and life insurance; gym reimbursement; an outstanding pension plan and tax savings programs; generous vacations and sick leave; and more. Provisions are made for professional staff to continue their development as academics or researchers while at the Council.

For more information, see: http://www.ssrc.org/about/employment/

Risky Liasons? Democracy and Religion: reflections and case studies

Risky Liasons?
Democracy and Religion: reflections and case studies.
G.J Buijs, J.T. Sunier and P.G.A. Versteeg (eds.) VU University Press, 2013
http://www.vuuitgeverij.com/149-risky-liaisons

In a democracy, there is always the risk of antagonism, conflict and opposition rising to the surface. Most people in the West take these risks for granted and are predisposed to accept the imperfections of the system. Globally, however, democracy is not as self-evident. Actually, its acclaimed universality is highly contested. To what extent is democracy a Western, Eurocentric Project? And to what extent is this form of government compatible with other cultural and value systems?

Ιn this book, the authors address these questions by revealing how democracy is informed by religious values from a variety of traditions. In doing so, they make clear that religion and democracy are not as neatly separated as the secularist point of view would have us believe. They also question the popular opinion that Islam is at odds with democratic government, for example in the analysis of shura, an Islamic form of consultation with the people. Democratic traditions and religious value systems can, therefore, interact and co-exist in more than one way. Any reader who wants to examine these interactions, and the challenges that they pose for contemporary plural society will find this book useful.

With contributions from John Anderson, Ina ter Avest, Edien Bartels, Christoph Baumgartner, Lenie Brouwer, Herman de Dijn, Yaser Ellethy, Mohammed Girma, Matthew Kaemingk, Michiel Leezenberg, Bert Jan Lietaert Peerbolte, Siebren Miedema, Frans van der Velden, and John Witte.

New book – Islam in the West: Iraqi Shi’i Communities in Transition and Dialogue

NEW BOOK FROM PETER LANG

Islam in the West: Iraqi Shi’i Communities in Transition and Dialogue
By Kieran Flynn
Oxford: Peter Lang 259 pp. | ISBN 978-3-0343-0905-9 | £40.00

This book studies the historical, religious and political concerns of the Iraqi Shi‘i community as interpreted by the members of that community who now live in the United Kingdom and Ireland, following the 2003-2010 war and occupation in Iraq. It opens up a creative space to explore dialogue between Islam and the West, looking at issues such as intra-Muslim conflict, Muslim–Christian relations, the changing face of Arab Islam and the experience of Iraq in the crossfire of violence and terrorism – all themes which are currently emerging in preaching and in discussion among Iraqi Shi‘a in exile. The book’s aim is to explore possibilities for dialogue with Iraqi Shi‘i communities who wish, in the midst of political, social and religious transition, to engage with elements of Christian theology such as pastoral and liberation theology.

Contents:
– Shi‘i Muslim Migration and Settlement in Ireland and the UK
– Shi‘i Religious Narratives in History and Ritual Memory
– The Narrative of Emancipation Among Shi‘a in Iran
– Narrative Shi‘i Opposition and Emancipation in Iraq
– Shi‘i Political Empowerment in Iraq
– Shi‘i Sermons and Narratives
– Catholic Theology in Dialogue with Shi‘i Narratives.

Available from <http://www.peterlang.com?430905>

PhD scholarship at University of Kent

Postgraduate Research Scholarships in the School of Social Policy, Sociology and Social Research (SSPSSR) University of Kent.

SSPSSR has a world-wide reputation for excellence and is one of the leading and largest research centres for social science in the UK. In the last Research Assessment Exercise, we were ranked joint third with 70% of our research being evaluated as either ‘World Leading’ or of ‘International excellence in terms of originality, significance and rigor.’

The School offers an unrivalled context in which to study for a PhD in the social sciences. We are a member of the South East Doctoral Training Centre (SEDTC) which awards scholarships funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), and the School has been awarded European Union Erasmus Mundus funding for a Doctorate in Cultural and Global Criminology (DCGC).

As a result of our success in the 2013 ESRC SEDTC Scholarship competition we are in a position to award additional PGR scholarships to commence in September 2013. These cover tuition fees at the postgraduate standard home/EU rate together with an annual maintenance stipend of £13,590 per annum.

We have a thriving postgraduate community of over 200 students and offer a large and diverse range of professional seminars, School seminar programmes, workshops, methods and advanced methods training, transferrable skills, study groups, and writing/career workshops (home and abroad) for our students. Present postgraduate students are conducting research into a wide range of issues including comparative social welfare; the third sector; violence; cultural criminology; new media and technology; work and employment; environmental movements; the sociology of the body; penal policy; intoxication and drug policy; social and cultural theory; suffering; youth transitions; the sociology of private space; sex, gender and sexuality; ethnicity and identity; evangelical church membership; and a wide range of other topics.

Further information about this New Round of Scholarship can be found here
http://www.kent.ac.uk/sspssr/postgraduate/feesandfunds.html
or email directly the Postgraduate Office
sspssr-pg-admin@kent.ac.uk

Deadline for receipt of applications is Thursday, the 27th of June 2013.
Interviews for shortlisted applicants will take place on Wednesday the 10th of July 2013

Writing Religion. The Making of Turkish Alevi Islam

Writing Religion. The Making of Turkish Alevi Islam
Markus Dressler
Oxford University Press, 2013

http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/HistoryWorld/British/Since1945/?view=usa&ci=9780199969401

Description

In the late 1980s, the Alevis, at that time thought to be largely assimilated into the secular Turkish mainstream, began to assert their difference as they never had before. The question of Alevism’s origins and its relation to Islam and to Turkish culture became a highly contested issue. According to the dominant understanding, Alevism is part of the Islamic tradition, although located on its margins. It is further assumed that Alevism is intrinsically related to Anatolian and Turkish culture, carrying an ancient Turkish heritage, leading back into pre-Islamic Central Asian Turkish pasts.

Dressler argues that this knowledge about the Alevis-their demarcation as “heterodox” but Muslim and their status as carriers of Turkish culture-is in fact of rather recent origins. It was formulated within the complex historical dynamics of the late Ottoman Empire and the first years of the Turkish Republic in the context of Turkish nation-building and its goal of ethno-religious homogeneity.

Features

– Extensive examination of marginalized religious groups who figure significantly in the modern formulation of secular Turkish nationalism

Reviews

“Writing Religion is at once the first ‘critical genealogy’ of the field of Alevi studies and an outstanding investigation into the impact of Euro-American concepts commonly used in the study of religion on the representation, scholarly examination, and governmental management of religious communities outside western contexts. Dressler sets a new standard in the study of ‘Alevism’ in Turkey and simultaneously makes a major contribution to methodology in the study of religion.”
–Ahmet T. Karamustafa, Professor of History, University of Maryland

“Writing Religion is a masterful study that attends to method for history’s sake. It is at once a revealing cautionary tale about the missteps of ‘back reading’ history and a guide for moving forward with analyses unencumbered by classic modernist constraints. Markus Dressler’s keen study of Alevism–and its myriad constructions in the hands of scholars and politicians, among others–establishes a veritable roadmap for ‘thinking Islam’ in fresh ways.”
–Greg Johnson, author of Sacred Claims: Repatriation and Living Tradition

“This thought-provoking and provocative but historically sensitive contribution is the best examination I have seen of the political foundation for the Kizilbas communities renamed ‘Alevis.’ Dressler’s interpretation will be a prime resource for
both scholarship and public policy concerning the religio-secular debate in Turkey.”
–M. Hakan Yavuz, author of Toward an Islamic Enlightenment: The Gülen Movement

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Prologue: Alevism Contested
Introduction: Genealogies and Significations
Part 1: Missionaries, Nationalists, and the Kizilbas-Alevis
Chapter 1: The Western Discovery of the Kizilbas-Alevis
Chapter 2: Nationalism, Religion, and Inter-Communal Violence
Chapter 3: Entering the Gaze of the Nationalists
Part 2: Mehmed Fuad Köprülü (1890-1966) and the Conceptualization of Inner-Islamic Difference
Chapter 4: Nationalism, Historiography, and Politics
Chapter 5: Religiography: Taxonomies of Essences and Differences
Chapter 6: Alevi and Alevilik in the Work of Fuad Köprülü and His Legacy
Conclusion: Tropes of Difference and Sameness – The Making of Alevism as a Modernist
Project Notes
Bibliography
Index

Registration Open: Digital Media and Sacred Text, June 17 (Open University, London)

DIGITAL MEDIA AND SACRED TEXT

Monday 17 June, Open University
Camden Town, London9am – 6pm

This one-day Open University conference will bring together academics interested in the study of digital sacred text from a wide range of religious traditions, including sociologists, anthropologists, media scholars, computer scientists, historians and digital humanists. We also welcome religious practitioners and publishers engaged in creating digital sacred texts.
We are delighted to announce that the keynote speaker will be Professor Heidi Campbell (Texas A&M University).
Attendance at this event will cost £20.
Thanks to generous funding from the AHRC, 30 free places are available for the first delegates to register.
A full programme and online registration page can be accessed here:
http://www.mediatingreligion.org/events/digital-media-and-sacred-text

Call for chapters – Contemporary Christianity

This is a call for chapters for two edited books on contemporary Christianity (each volume will have 20 chapters) to be published by Brill publishers (series editors: Carole Cusack & James R. Lewis)
The Brill Handbook of Global Christianity and Christianity: Movements, Institutions & Allegiance.

A chapter is required for The Brill Handbook of Global Christianity on the theme of Global Evangelical Politics
Chapters are required for Christianity: Movements, Institutions & Allegiance on the themes of:
i) Religious Orders
ii) Congregational Dynamics
iii) Seventh-day Adventists, or the Church of Latter-Day Saints, or the Unification Church

Each chapter should be 7-8000 words in length
Time-line:
Submission of title of chapter and abstract (maximum 350 words) and a biographical note (maximum 250 words) by 31 July 2013;
Completed papers due by 31 January 2014;
Typescript delivered to Brill by 30 April 2014;

For further information contact:
Dr. Stephen Hunt at
Stephen3.Hunt@uwe.ac.uk
Associate Professor
Department of Health & Applied Social Sciences
University of the West of England, Bristol, UK

New book: The Religious Identity of Young Muslim Women in Berlin

“The Religious Identity of Young Muslim Women in Berlin: An Ethnography Study” by Synnøve K.N. Bendixsen

About the book:
The Religious Identity of Young Muslim Women in Berlin offers an in-depth ethnographic account of Muslim youth’s religious identity formation and their engagement with Islam in everyday life. Focusing on Muslim women in the organisation MJD in Germany, it provides a deeper understanding of processes related to immigration, transnationalism, the transformation of identifications and the reconstruction of selfhood. The book deals with the collective content of religious identity formation and processes of differentiation, engaging with the changing role of religion in an urban European setting, restructuring of religious authority and the formation of gender identity through religion. Synnøve K.N. Bendixsen examines how the participants seek and debate what it means to be a good Muslim, and discusses the religious movement as individual engagement in a collective project.

Review:
“At last, a richly-textured, ethnographic study which takes religiosity seriously. This fine study of young women’s involvement in a particular, Islamic movement in Berlin illuminates the reasons for ‘the turn to Islam’ of a new generation in Europe. […] Marked throughout by methodological and analytical sophistication, it challenges many easy generalisations about how Muslims born and educated in Europe appropriate Islam.”
Philip Lewis, University of Bradford.

Table of content:
Acknowledgements
A Note on Language and Sources
Introduction
Situating the Field and Methodological Reflections Making Sense of the City: The Religious Spaces of Young Muslim Women in Berlin
Negotiating, Resisting and (Re)Constructing
Othering Crafting the Religious Individual in a Faith Community
Trajectories of Religious Acts and Desires: Bargaining with Religious Norms and Ideals
Making a Religious Gender Order The Meanings of and Incentives for a Religious Identification
Conclusion
Appendix 1: Situating the Movements Studied within the Wider Islamic Field in Germany
Bibliography
Index
More information is available at the following site:
http://www.brill.com/religious-identity-young-muslim-women-berlin

New Book – The Multifaith Movement: Global Risks and Cosmopolitan Solutions

Anna Halafoff, The Multifaith Movement: Global Risks and Cosmopolitan Solutions
published by Springer:
http://www.springer.com/social+sciences/religious+studies/book/978-94-007-5209-2

This book documents the ultramodern rise of the multifaith movement, as mulitfaith initiatives have been increasingly deployed as cosmopolitan solutions to counter global risks such as terrorism and climate change at the turn of the 21st century. These projects aim to enhance common security, particularly in Western societies following the events of September 11, 2001 and the July 2005 London bombings, where multifaith engagement has been promoted as a strategy to counter violent extremism.
The author draws on interviews with 56 leading figures in the field of multifaith relations, including Paul Knitter, Eboo Patel, Marcus Braybrooke, Katherine Marshall, John Voll and Krista Tippett. Identifying the principle aims of the multifaith movement, the analysis explores the benefits-and challenges-of multifaith engagement, as well as the effectiveness of multifaith initiatives in countering the process of radicalization. Building on notions of cosmopolitanism, the work proposes a new theoretical framework termed ‘Netpeace’, which recognizes the interconnectedness of global problems and their solutions. In doing so, it acknowledges the capacity of multi-actor peacebuilding networks, including religious and state actors, to address the pressing dilemmas of our times. The primary intention of the book is to assist in the formation of new models of activism and governance, founded on a ‘politics of understanding’ modeled by the multifaith movement.

Dr Anna Halafoff is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation at Deakin University. http://www.deakin.edu.au/arts-ed/staff/directory.php?username=halafoff

new publication: EPS symposium

The Publication of a symposium on ‘Religion, Democracy and Civil Liberties’ is in the latest issue (2/2013) of European Political Science.
The symposium can be found here: http://www.palgrave-journals.com/eps/journal/v12/n2/index.html

Table of contents:
Introduction: Religion, Democracy and Civil Liberties (Luca Ozzano)
European Muslims: Facts and Challenges (Tariq Ramadan)
Religion and Democracy: International, Transnational and Global issues (Pasquale Ferrara)
Religion, Democracy and Civil Liberties: Theoretical Perspectives and Empirical Ramifications