Call for Papers: “Religion and Public Institutions: New Practices and Religious-Secular Dynamics”

Call for Papers:

In the frame of the 33rd ISSR conference to be hold in Louvain-la-Neuve (Belgium), from 2-5 July 2015 we launch a call for papers for Session STS 21.

Religion and Public Institutions: New Practices and Religious-Secular Dynamics

Public institutions are crucial sites for exploring the changing role of religion in contemporary societies. One the one hand, they serve as windows to observe the practical, social and political implications of the current global transformations of the religious-secular dynamics. Public institutions reflect in miniature the challenges raised by the growing religious vitality and variety in the public sphere. On the other hand, they gain relevance as strategic places where the religious field and its boundaries are being reshaped. In this regard, the increasing presence of ‘holistic spiritualities’ in public institutions such as prisons or hospitals evidences the blurring nature of traditional boundaries and foster new practic es at the limit of the secular. Moreover, the micro processes of negotiation, contestation and accommodation of religious claims within these institutions contribute to redefine the role of historical churches and religious minorities in current societies.This panel aims to bring together researchers studying the role of religion in public institutions such as—but not restricted to—hospitals, prisons or schools. We particularly welcome papers with strong empirical foundations and those taking a cross-instiutional or cross-country comparative approach.
We invite paper proposals related to this topic to be submitted no later than December, 15th 2014. Proposals should use the online form (http://sisr-issr.org/Program/)

For any information, please contact us via e-mail:

Irene BECCI (UNIL– Université de Lausanne, Switzerland: Irene.BecciTerrier@unil.ch)
Mar GRIERA (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain: mariadelmar.griera@uab.cat)
Lene KÜHLE (Aarhus University, Denmark: lk@cas.au.dk)

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Call for Papers: European Sociological Association, Prague, 25 – 28 August 2015

ESA 2015 – Call for Papers – 12th Conference of the European Sociological Association — Prague, Czech Republic, 25 – 28 August 2015

ESA – RN 34 Sociology of Religion

Religion, Social Inequalities, Differences, and Sociological Imagination

Coordinator: PD Dr. Heidemarie Winkel, Technical University of Dresden
heidemarie.winkel@mailbox.tu-dresden.de

After decades of critical discussion, the social significance of religion in Europe is an accepted and empirically grounded fact today. Whether it concerns political attitudes, economic orientation or other social fields of life like education, culture and the media or the private sphere, manifold empirical studies demonstrate the sustaining influence of religion on preferences, practices and identity formation. At large, it is undisputed that (structural) secularization does not diminish, but rather nourishes religious pluralization as well as the development of new spiritualities and popular forms of
religion in Europe.

This development is – among other things – a consequence of global dynamics; they accelerate social, cultural and economic transformations, and more recently radical political changes. This raises questions about how religion is involved and affected by these changes in the neo-liberal era (whether on the local, the national or the supranational level) and how religion reacts to these all-encompassing transformations and turmoil.

A particular interest concerns religion’s social forms of organization and practice that respond to the increase of social inequalities and asymmetries; the latter are often trapped in power relations like in the case of neo-liberal economics and politics.

Another concern is how religion is acting on the various forms of social difference and discrimination that are recently unfolding with new life. For example Islamophobia is one of the new ways in which racism is expressed in contemporary Europe next to older forms of discrimination like anti-semitism, sexism and the growth of right-wing extremism. This finally leads to the question how religion itself has become a (constant) source of social friction and exclusion, whether on a macro or on a micro scale, for example regarding access to political, economic and civil rights. This is intertwined with an interest in the social practices of religious actors and the ways they strive to strengthen their agency in European societies under the conditions of growing inequality and social discrimination.

All these questions concern politically and morally contested issues. This additionally centers the focus of interest towards how religious groups, organizations and individuals are included in civic debates about social discrimination and inequality, i.e. poverty and inequality of income, unemployment, the cutback of the welfare system.


Authors are invited to submit their abstract either to the general session or any specific session. Please submit only to one session. After abstract evaluation, coordinators will have the chance to transfer papers between sessions where applicable.

Abstracts should not exceed 250 words. Each paper session will have the duration of 1.5 hours. Normally sessions will include 4 papers.

Abstracts must be submitted online to the submission platform, see below. Abstracts sent by email cannot be accepted. Abstracts will be peer-reviewed and selected for presentation by the Research Network; the letter of notification will be sent by the conference software system in
early April 2015.

Abstract submission deadline: 1st February 2015
Abstract submission platform: www.esa12thconference.eu

If you have further questions on the conference, please visit the conference website. For
further information on the Research Network, please visit www.europeansociology.org

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Workshop: “Varieties of Religious (Super) Diversity” at Univ of Birmingham, 26 Nov, 2014

Varieties of Religious (Super) Diversity

University of Birmingham

Wednesday 26th November  — 10.30-4.30 — Room 420, Muirhead Tower

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You are invited to attend a workshop exploring current research on religious diversity in the UK.

The aim of the workshop is to draw together a series of insights from different disciplines on the nature and study of religious (super)diversity in the UK today. During the morning we will build up a picture of the range of  research being undertaken in this field. After lunch we will begin to identify where there may be gaps, and then go on to ask where individuals and research groups could be working together to fill these gaps. We hope to end by identifying a number of projects that might be possible to build for the future.

This workshop is being organised by the Institute for Research into Superdiversity (IRiS) and in association with the Institute of Advanced Studies (IAS) and the Centre for the Public Understanding of Religion (CPUR).

Current contributors include:

  • Linda Woodhead (Lancaster) who is coming to offer a sociological insight,
  • Martin Stringer (Birmingham) brings an anthropological and ethnographic perspective,
  • David Cheetham (Birmingham) will bring views from the theology of religions,
  • Helen Hall (Cardiff) works in the field of religion and law,
  • Chris Baker (William Temple Foundation) does detailed work on urban theology,
  • Sarah Hall (Birmingham) will offer an insight from the context of education and
  • Chris Allan (Birmingham) is a leading expert on Islamaphobia and religious hatred.

We would welcome contributors from any of these subject areas and from other disciplines that would provide something interesting to add to the conversation.

For further information please contact Martin Stringer at m.d.stringer@bham.ac.uk and to register for the event please contact Sheba Saeed at s.saeed@bham.ac.uk

 

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Two Postdoctoral Fellowships: Rice University

The Department of Sociology at Rice University is offering two postdoctoral fellowships (two years in length) to begin July 2015.  Applicants are encouraged to pursue their own research agenda during their fellowship, but we will give priority to applicants who also establish a collaborative research plan on a topic of mutual interest with one or more of our faculty members (http://sociology.rice.edu).

For one of the two positions special consideration will be given to those working in one or more of the following subareas: urban sociology, environmental sociology, and stratification. Teaching responsibilities are limited to one undergraduate course during the two years. In addition to an annual salary of $52,000, the fellowship provides office space, computer equipment, and a $1,000 annual travel account. The application deadline is January 15th 2015, but applications will be considered until the position is filled.

Applications must be submitted in a two-step process. First, applicants must apply online through Ricework at:

https://jobs.rice.edu/applicants/jsp/shared/position/JobDetails_css.jsp.

  In addition to providing the basic application information, applicants must upload their curriculum vitae (including a list of references), and a 2-5 page proposal for research to be conducted during the postdoctoral period, to this website. Second, please email a PDF copy of at least one recent publication to soci@rice.edu, along with three letters of recommendation (submitted separately by the letter writers to this email address).

Questions about the postdoctoral fellowship should also be emailed to soci@rice.edu.

Equal Opportunity Employer – Females/Minorities/Veterans/Disabled/Sexual Orientation/Gender Identity.

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Appel à communication: “Les écoles confessionnelles face à la diversité : transformations, stratégies et résistances”

33e Conférence SISR: “Éprouver le religieux”
Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgique, 2-5 juillet 2015
http://www.sisr-issr.org/

Appel à communication
ST 29 : “Les écoles confessionnelles face à la diversité : transformations, stratégies et résistances”

Organisatrices de la session :

Sara Teinturier, GSRL (EPHE-CNRS), Paris, sara.teinturier@ephe.sorbonne.fr
Julia Martinez-Arino, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity,martineza@mmg.mpg.de
Sabrina Pastorelli, GSRL (EPHE-CNRS), Paris, pastorelli.sabrina@gmail.com

Résumé

Depuis le milieu du XXe siècle, les sociétés démocratiques sont marquées par la diversité culturelle et religieuse. Or, les écoles confessionnelles se construisent généralement autour d’une tradition religieuse principale. Quelles transformations et défis cette situation a-t-elle engendrées ? Plusieurs niveaux d’analyse peuvent être retenus pour en prendre la mesure : observe-t-on dans ces établissements une ouverture aux autres confessions (accueil d’élèves de diverses confessions religieuses, enseignement inter-religieux, accommodement des pratiques religieuses … ) ? Au contraire, est-ce l’occasion de l’affirmation d’une identité religieuse forte pouvant être l’expression d’une résistance à la pluralisation du corps social ? Comment les enseignants et les directions des établissements prennent-ils en compte cette nouvelle situation dans leurs pratiques pédagogiques et la mise en oeuvre des activités scolaires ? Lorsque des fédérations scolaires existent au niveau national, des réflexions sont-elles menées autour de ces questions ? D’autres acteurs – syndicats, autorités religieuses, parents d’élèves… – peuvent également proposer leurs propres interprétations et solutions : que manifestent-elles ? Cette section thématique ambitionne d’approfondir les questions soulevées par Robert Jackson dès 2004 (RethinkingReligious Education and Plurality), en se limitant aux seules écoles confessionnelles et en privilégiant les stratégies et les pratiques des acteurs. Sans se restreindre à l’étude d’une seule situation nationale, elle entend proposer des perspectives comparatives et mieux comprendre les liens à l’oeuvre entre éducation, religion et identité.

Soumission de votre proposition : Les propositions de communication doivent être soumises en ligne(http://sisr-issr.org/Program/), avec un titre et un résumé (350 mots maximum), avant le 15 décembre 2014.

Pour toute information sur cette session thématique, n’hésitez pas à nous contacter aux adresses électroniques indiquées ci-dessus.

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Call for Papers: Session on “Faith based Schools facing diversity: Transformations, Strategies, and Resistances”

33rd ISSR Conference: “Sensing Religion”
Louvain-la-Neuve (Belgium), 2-5th July, 2015
http://www.sisr-issr.org/

Call for papers – in either English or French
TS 29: “Faith based Schools facing diversity: Transformations, Strategies, and Resistances”

Session organisers:
Sara Teinturier, GSRL (EPHE-CNRS), Paris,sara.teinturier@ephe.sorbonne.fr
Julia Martinez-Arino, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, martineza@mmg.mpg.de
Sabrina Pastorelli, GSRL (EPHE-CNRS), Paris,pastorelli.sabrina@gmail.com

Abstract:

Democratic societies are characterised in the last decades by cultural and religious diversity. However, faith-based schools are usually structured around a particular religious tradition. What transformations and challenges does this plural situation generate for such institutions? Different analytical levels can be considered in order to better understand the implications. Do we witness an openness of these schools to other faiths (reception of students from different religious backgrounds, interfaith teaching of religion, accommodation of religious practices…)? Or do we, in contrast, observe the affirmation of a strong religious identity as an expression of the resistance to the pluralisation of society? How do teachers and school boards take into account this new situation in their pedagogical practices and the implementation of school activities? Are school federations at the national level reflecting upon these issues? What are the interpretations and solutions provided by other actors involved, such as trade unions, religious authorities, and parents? The objective of this thematic session is to deepen the questions raised by Robert Jackson in 2004, limiting the scope to faith-based schools and giving priority to the strategies and practices of the actors. With the aim of better understanding the links between education, religion and identity, both national studies as well as comparative perspectives are welcomed in this session.

Deadline: Please use the online form (http://sisr-issr.org/Program/) to submit your paper proposals (title and abstract, 350 words max) by December 15, 2014.

For any information about this thematic session, do not hesitate to contact us via e-mail.

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New Journal: Review of Religion and Chinese Society

New Journal

Review of Religion and Chinese Society
Editor-in-Chief: Fenggang Yang

Review of Religion and Chinese Society is an international peer-reviewed journal that publishes articles and book reviews in social sciences and certain humanities disciplines. It welcomes studies that compare religion in Chinese and some other societies.

http://www.brill.com/products/journal/review-religion-and-chinese-society

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Registration Now Open: INFORM Autumn Seminar: “Minority Religions and Schooling”

INFORM Autumn Seminar

Minority Religions and Schooling

Date – Saturday, 6 December 2014; 9.30am – 4.45pm
Location – New Academic Building, London School of Economics

‘State multiculturalism has failed’, declared David Cameron in 2011.  Yet there is a continued expansion in state-funded religious schooling in Britain. This expansion has gone hand-in-hand with legal rulings that have placed minority religions on stronger footing next to the more established faiths. After exponential growth of Academies operating outside of local authority control since 2000, and three years after the first Free Schools opened their doors (a programme which has assisted the expansion of a diversity of faith-based schools), it is a good opportunity to take stock and reflect on the nature of minority faith schooling in Britain.

Speakers include:

  • Farid Panjwani (Director of the Centre for Research and Evaluation in Muslim Education at the Institute of Education, University of London) “Muslims and Faith Schools: identity and social aspiration in a minority religion”
  • Ozcan Keles (Chairperson of the Dialogue Society) “Fethullah Gulen-inspired Hizmet Schools from an Alumnus: basics, characteristics and critique”
  • Nitesh Gor (Chief Executive, Avanti Schools Trust) “Inclusivity and Fidelity”
  • Jonny Scaramanga (Doctoral student at the Institute of Education) “The History of Accelerated Christian Education in the United Kingdom”
  • Richy Thompson (Campaigns Officer (Faith Schools and Education), British Humanist Association) “A Humanist Perspective on Minority Religions and Schooling”
  • and others.

Registration is now open and can be done using a credit/debit card through PayPal or by posting a booking form and a cheque payable to ‘Inform’ to Inform, Houghton St., London WC2A 2AE. Tickets (including buffet lunch, coffee and tea) paid by 10 November 2014 are £38 each (£18 students/unwaged).

Tickets booked after 10 November 2014 will cost £48 each (£28 students/unwaged).  A limited number of seats will be made available to A-Level students at £10 before 10 November 2014 (£20 after 10 November). 

Please access the attached hyperlink for an important electronic communications disclaimer: http://lse.ac.uk/emailDisclaimer

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Appel à communications: Société Internationale de Sociologie des Religions – Conférence bisannuelle

La 33e conférence de la SISR aura lieu à Louvain-la-Neuve (Belgique), du 2 au 5 Juillet 2015.

Nous invitons maintenant la soumission de propositions de communication. Pour qu’une proposition puisse être acceptée, il faut être membre en règle de la SISR pour la période 2014-2015.

Le formulaire de soumission en ligne pour les propositions de communication pour la Conférence de 2015 est maintenant disponible. La date limite des soumissions est le 15 décembre 2014. Les propositions de communication devront être soumises en ligne. Pour ce faire, veuillez aller à http://sisr-issr.org/program et suivre les consignes. De plus, veuillez prendre note de l’Appel à proposition atelier SISR sur le site web. La SISR vous invite à soumettre des propositions pour les ateliers internationaux sur des sujets de recherches novateurs dans le domaine, et qui se dérouleraient en 2015.

Pour des plus amples renseignements, veuillez contacter le president du programme pour la conference, M. Jasjit Singh (2015pres_programme@sisr-issr.org).

Le thème de la conférence sera Éprouver le religieux

Penser le religieux implique plus que la croyance, la pratique et l’organisation sociale. C’est aussi plus largement l’intrication du sensible, de l’expression et de la représentation, dans ce sens « éprouver le religieux ». L’expérience peut être sensorielle telle que les images, les sons et les odeurs des rites religieux. Elle peut aussi être communautaire et émotionnelle, des dimensions que plusieurs chercheurs ont théorisées sous des titres comme “effervescence collective”, “communitas” et les “régimes collectifs d’émotion”. Le sensible et les sens dans le religieux sont des thèmes récurrents en sociologie et en anthropologie depuis le début de ces disciplines. Ils se déploient dans de multiples directions et posent toute une série des questions reliées :

  • Quels sont les lieux pour éprouver le religieux et comment s’articulent le corps-temple, le temple privé et le temple communautaire ? Comment les déités et les multiples figures d’esprits peuvent-elles être représentées ? En quoi et comment leur représentation intervient dans les pratiques religieuses corporelle et communautaire ? Comment l’expérience religieuse est-elle impliquée et comment cela se manifeste et s’articule à la perception et à la représentation sensorielle ?
  • Comment les groupes religieux contemporains utilisent-ils des expériences sensorielles et d’autres expériences pour recueillir et pour servir leurs adhérents – de la production audiovisuelle à l’art, à la musique et à la danse? Quel est le rôle des images, de la musique et de la danse dans la production du religieux et non pas simplement en tant que productions religieuses ?
  • La dimension audiovisuelle et les médias s’impliquent des manières différentes, y compris à travers la télévision, la radio, l’art religieux, l’Internet et le monde du jeu. Comment les gens religieux comprennent-ils les expériences qui selon eux et elles sont au cœur de leurs vies religieuses ?  Comment ces questions varient-elles selon les différentes traditions religieuses du monde, et que peut-on apprendre de cette variété ?
  • Comment les expériences – sensorielles, émotionnelles ou de l’intérieur – s’expriment-elles dans les divers discours religieux ? Quel est le rôle du langage religieux dans ce contexte sensoriel et émotionnel ? Quelles sont les caractéristiques émotionnelles de la langue religieuse ? Comment peut-on comprendre dans ce contexte le succès de divers mouvements charismatiques ?
  • Comment les gens perçoivent-ils la religion dans la vie quotidienne ? Dans quelle mesure et comment les gens éprouvent le religieux, par exemple, en tant que source du sens, de l’identité, de la culpabilité, de la santé ou de l’obligation dans le contexte de leurs vies quotidiennes ?
  • Et dans une perspective réflexive, qu’éprouvons-nous en tant que sociologues et anthropologues comme le religieux ? Pourquoi et comment ? Est-ce que l’importance dans notre discipline des questions posées ici signale des transformations dans cette observation du religieux ?

Ces questions et d’autres semblables feront l’objet de notre conférence de 2015. Nous invitons des  communications sur ces questions et d’autres sujets d’intérêt pour les sciences sociales de la religion.

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Call for Papers: International Society for the Sociology of Religion – Biannual Conference

The 33rd ISSR conference will be held in Louvain-la-Neuve (Belgium), from 2-5 July 2015.

We now invite submissions for paper proposals. Acceptance of proposals is conditional on being a member in good standing (for 2014-2015) of the ISSR.

The online facility for submitting paper proposals for the 2015 Conference is now open. The deadline is 15 December 2014. To submit paper proposals, please go to http://sisr-issr.org/program and follow the instructions. Also, please note the Call for ISSR workshop proposals on the web site, by which the ISSR invites proposals for international workshops on innovative research topics in the field to be held in 2015.

For more information, please contact the Program Chair for the 2015 conference is Dr. Jasjit Singh (2015program_chair@sisr-issr.org).

The theme of the conference will be Sensing Religion

Religions are not just a matter of belief, of practice, and of social organization. They more broadly also involve experience, perception, and the expression and representation of such ‘sensing of the religious’. Experiences may be sensory, as with the sights, sounds, and smells of religious rituals; and they may be communal and emotional, as various scholars have theorized through concepts such as ‘collective effervescence’, ‘communitas’, and ‘collective emotional regimes’. The sensible and the senses in religion has been a recurring theme in sociology and anthropology since the beginning of these disciplines. It unfolds in multiple directions and poses a whole host of interconnected questions.

  • What are the locations for sensing religion and how do the individual body and the communal temple interrelate as such locations? How are deities and spiritual entities represented and how does that representation articulate with bodily and communal religious practice? How is religious experience involved and how does that manifest and articulate with sensory perception and representation?
  • How do contemporary religious groups use sensory and other experiences to gather and serve their adherents – from mega-church audio-visuals to congregational art, music, and dance?  What is the role of images, music, and dance as producers of the religious and not just religious productions?
  • The audio-visual dimension is involved in various ways with media, including through television, radio, religious art, the Internet and the world of gaming – how do religious people understand the experiences that they increasingly claim are central to their religious lives?  How do such matters vary across the world’s different religious traditions, and what can we learn from this variety?
  • How are experiences – sensory, emotional, or inward – expressed in varying religious discourses? What is the role of religious language in this sensory and emotional context? What are the emotional characteristics of religious language? How do we understand, in this context, the success of various charismatic movements?
  • How do people sense religion in daily life? To what extent and how do people feel religion as, for instance, a source of meaning, identity, guilt, health or obligation in their day to day existence?
  • And from a reflexive perspective, what do we as sociologists and anthropologists ‘sense’ as the religious? Why and how? Does the importance in our discipline of the questions just outlined signal transformations in this observation of the religious?

These questions, and others like them, will be the focus of our 2015 conference.  We welcome papers on these and other topics of interest to the social sciences of religion.

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