ESA Soc of Religion Call for Papers, Turino, 28-31 Aug

The 11th Conference of the European Sociological Association will be held 28-31 August, 2013 in Torino, Italy.

The Research Network Sociology of Religion (RN34) has issued its call for papers.
The call includes joint sessions with Sociology of Culture, Society and Sports, Sociology of Emotions, Qualitative Methods, and Sociology of Migration.
(Visit http://www.esareligion.org/)

Abstract submission opens on 12 December 2012 and closes 1 February 2013.

Call for Papers
RN34 – Sociology of Religion
Coordinators:
Anne-Sophie Lamine  anne-sophie.lamine@misha.fr
University of Strasbourg, France
Heidemarie Winkel  hwinkel@uni-potsdam.de
University of Postdam, Germany

Religion has often been understood as a response to personal, social or cultural crisis. Classical scholars, such as Peter L. Berger and Max Weber, pointed out that it provides a theodicy of good and evil – an account that gives ultimate meaning in a meaningless world. Religions, Stark and Bainbridge (1985) contend, are other-worldly compensators for individuals in crisis – for those who are deprived from this-worldly rewards. Even advocates of the secularization thesis often acknowledge that crisis and rapid social change in society temporarily motivate the popularity of religion (Bruce 1997).
But religion, once considered to be in crisis under the secularizing powers of modernity, is alive and well in Europe. More than that: religion seems to thrive on what can now be called the crisis of modernity. Modern science, the nation state, capitalism, unrestricted consumption and the globalizing economy, have lost much of their credibility and plausibility in many European countries. In this cultural climate, the voices of traditional religious groups grow louder whereas, some say, we are witnessing a massive turn to holistic forms of spirituality (e.g., Campbell 2007). The atheist-secular worldview is more than ever contested by a fraction of Muslims, Christian creationists, Buddhists and other religious groups while a mirror-like process of anti-identification gives rise to alarmist discourses about the return of religions and particularly on the danger of the “islamization of Europe”. Religion has once again become salient in the re-formation of identity and the construction of imagined communities: uprooted from tradition, modern individuals in identity crisis search for new (religious) values and meanings whereas some European nation states align themselves with their Christian heritage, long-standing traditions and religious pasts. Religion, then, can not easily be understood as the ‘irrational’ Other of modernity – it is instead a common and valid response to the growing crisis of modernity. Jurgen Habermas (2005), once a furious critic of religion, argued from this perspective that intellectuals should include religious partners in the ‘rational’ conversation about modernity since both share a growing critique on the maladies of modernity.
Motivated by these observations, the Research Network Sociology of Religion calls for papers on crisis, critique and change in relation to religion.

Particularlypapers are welcomed that discuss the following topics:
01RN34.
Studies dealing with religion in crisis, i.e. the way religious traditions such as Islam, Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism and the like – re-structure their organizations, beliefs, and practices and adopt, negotiate or resist processes of modernization, secularization and disenchantment.

02RN34.
Studies dealing with the ways religion provides answers to existential crisis and, particularly, the crisis of modernity – i.e. how and why Islam, Christianity and other religious-spiritual groups formulate a critique of and alternative to modern science, capitalism, mass-consumption and individualism.

03RN34.
Studies dealing with the way crisis increases the salience of religious identities and cultural polarization, i.e., in what particular ways religion gives meaning in everyday life and if, how and why religious identity-formations induce processes of inclusion and exclusion; social cohesion and religious conflict.

04RN34.
Studies focusing on the way religion changes the modern world in Europe and beyond, i.e., how rapid social changes motivate the appeal and popularity of religion and if, how and why such religions transform private and public domains in Europe.

05RN34.
Sociology of religion (open)

07JS28JS34. RN34 Joint session with RN07 Sociology of Culture and RN28 Society and Sports
Sport and religion/spirituality
(Chairs: Davide Sterchele; Stef Aupers & Hubert Knoblauch)

Whereas the analogy between sport and religion has been criticized by many scholars mainly because of the lack (or low relevance) of the transcendent dimension in traditional sport practices, the recent sociological elaborations of the concept of spirituality seems to provide new interesting tools for interpreting the emerging forms of bodily movement. At the same time, the study of the analogies between traditional sports and institutionalized religions still generates relevant sociological insights.

In order to contribute to these streams of analysis and to open new horizons for further studies, the ESA research networks ‘Sociology of Culture’, ‘Society and Sports’, and ‘Sociology of Religion’, invite potential contributors to submit abstracts to the joint session on ‘Sport and religion/spirituality’. The session will thus provide a forum for exchange and sharing among sociologists of culture, sport and religion, who deal with these themes from different but overlapping perspectives.

RN34 web-page : http://www.esareligion.org/ 07JS34.
RN34 Joint session with RN07 Sociology of Culture Cultures of Religion – Religious Cultures (Chairs: Hubert Knoblauch & Regine Herbrik) “Religious Culture is quite frequently used, particularly in the French context (“culture religieuse”) relating both, to the general as well as to the specific religious patterns of culture. It may serve well not only to address empirical questions concerning the increasing cultural significance of religion within Europe as well as globally; it may also connect recent theoretical approaches in the sociology of culture on the one hand with approaches in the sociology of religion. For the joint session we invite, therefore, contributions addressing both empirical as well as theoretical issues concerning “religious cultures”.

11JS34. RN34 Joint session with RN11 Sociology of emotions Affects and Emotions in the Field of Religion (Chairs: Stef Aupers & Cécile Vermot) Generations of scholars of theology and religious studies have viewed affects, emotions, and religion as closely related issues. What can be said about the certain shapes, characteristics and forms of this relationship in present times? How far is the research on emotions especially crucial for the understanding of religious life in Europe and for the coexistence, or even living together, of different confessions? What role do “emotional regimes” (Riis/Woodhead) or “feeling rules” (Hochschild) play with regard to the formation of emotional cultures both in religious groups and communities and with regard to the quest for salvation or spirituality of individual persons?

20JS34. RN34 Joint session with RN20 Qualitative Methods Qualitative Research on Religion(Chairs: Regine Herbrik & Bernt Schnettler) We also encourage participants to present papers concerned with methodological questions related to the specific problems of empirical research in the Study of Religions. Can we transfer methods from other fields of research to the sociology of religion or do we need special, field-specific methods? What can we learn from methods used in neighbouring disciplines? Which sets of methods can be recommended for empirical analyses targeting micro-macro issues in understanding religion? What role does the gender issue play in this? We are especially interested in papers reporting empirical research finding in the sociology of religion using qualitative research methods in combination with methodological reflections.

34JS35. RN34 Joint session with RN35 Sociology of Migration Migrant religions as a challenge to European identities (Chairs: Berta Alvarez-Miranda & Heidemarie Winkel) Already in classical sociological theory, religion functioned as a looking glass of change in times of crisis. At present, migrant religions are challenging and contributing to a critique of European identities. How do various European contexts accommodate migrant religions? What are the experiences, attitu­des and demands of their followers? How does the treatment of matters related to Islam inform on European identities and their current transformations? What conceptual and empirical tools does socio­logical analysis offer for the understanding of the varieties of internal and external religious critique?

Final CfP for Tartu workshop next June

CALL FOR PAPERS

INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP

Religion, Law and Policy Making: European Norms and National Practices in Eastern Europe and the Russian Federation

Date: 13-14 June 2013
Site: Tartu, Estonia
Organizer: Center for EU-Russia Studies (CEURUS), University of Tartu, Estonia

Topics: The goal of the Workshop is to advance the multidisciplinary study of the processes-cultural, economic, political, and legal-of European integration related to the patterns of interaction among ‘religion, policies and law’ in post-communist countries of Eastern Europe.
The complex interplay among European and national law, and law, policy and religion at the levels of nation and European Union is approached from jurisprudential, religious, sociological, cultural, historical, and political (comparative politics, political theory, IR) perspectives.
Language: English
Deadline: 11 February 2013. Abstracts of 300-600 words as well as a short bio (100 words) should be sent to: alar.kilp@ut.ee.
Contact: Dr. Alar Kilp (University of Tartu); Prof. Jerry G. Pankhurst (Wittenberg University, USA); Prof. William B. Simons (University of Tartu).
E-mail: alar.kilp@ut.ee;
jpankhurst@wittenberg.edu
william.simons@ut.ee.
Internet:
<http://ceurus.ut.ee/conferences/call-for-papers-religion-and-politics-workshop/>

New book on the Caliphate

New book:

Demystifying the Caliphate: Historical Memory and Contemporary Contexts, ed. by Madawi Al-Rasheed, Carool Kersten and Marat Shterin, London: Hurst and Co & New York: Columbia University Press (November, 2012)

Paperback edition will be out in early January 2013.
For details, please visit
http://www.hurstpublishers.com/book/demystifying-the-caliphate/

Young American Muslims: Dynamics of Identity

Young American Muslims: Dynamics of Identity

By Nahid Afrose Kabir, University of South Australia
http://www.euppublishing.com/book/9780748669936

This book presents a journey into the ideas, outlooks and identity of young Muslims in America today. Based on around 400 in-depth interviews with young Muslims from Florida, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New York and Virginia, all the richness and nuance of these minority voices can be heard.

Many young Americans cherish an American dream, ‘that all men are created equal’. And the election of America’s first black President in 2008 has shown that America has moved forward. Yet since 9/11 Muslim Americans have faced renewed challenges, with their loyalty and sense of belonging being questioned.

Chapters include: Introduction: My Journey and the ‘Muslim Question’; Identity Matters; The Culture Debate; What Does it Take to be an American?; Reflections on the American Media; Barack Hussein Obama and Young Muslims’ Political Awareness; The Palestinian Question; From Here to Where?

November 2012
248 pp o HB o 978 0 7486 6993 6
HB Special Price: £70.00 £56.50

Nahid Afrose Kabir is a Senior Research Fellow at the International Centre for Muslim and non-Muslim Understanding, University of South Australia. She was a visiting fellow (2009 – 2011) at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University, USA. Dr Kabir is the author of Muslims in Australia: Immigration, Race Relations and Cultural History (London: Routledge 2005), and Young British Muslims: Identity, Culture, Politics and the Media (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press 2010).

Bristol University Muslim Participation Conference – Call for Papers

Dr Therese O’Toole, Prof Tariq Modood, and Dr Daniel Nilsson DeHanas are pleased to announce/invite:
CALL FOR PAPERS: MUSLIM PARTICIPATION IN CONTEMPORARY GOVERNANCE
Academic Workshop followed by Report Launch Event

Venue: Bishopsgate Institute, East London, UK

Date: 31 January 2013

SPEAKERS INCLUDE:
Professor Tariq Modood (Bristol University)
Humera Khan (An-Nisa Society)
Dilwar Hussain (Islamic Society of Britain)

This Workshop will bring together academic contributors from Britain and across Europe to discuss Muslim participation in forms of contemporary governance. Over the past decade, Muslims in many European states have emerged as participants in governance at different levels and across a range of policy domains. Important changes in this regard include the increased presence of Muslims in: structures of political representation; participatory initiatives concerned with social cohesion, faith-based social welfare programmes or countering violent extremism; a range of local democratic and consultative forums and bodies; lobbying and advocacy for equalities legislation both at the state-level and EU-level; and increasingly sophisticated political coalitions for the acknowledgement and diminution of Islamophobia.

The workshop will feature a day of research on and discussion of developments in the study of Muslim participation in forms of contemporary governance. This will be followed by a public Report Launch Event in the evening, featuring a research presentation from the AHRC/ESRC project Muslim Participation in Contemporary Governance: a two and a half year study of developments in Muslim participation in governance at national level and in three local case-study areas of Birmingham, Leicester and Tower Hamlets. At this Report Launch Event policy makers and Muslim civil society actors will respond to the project’s Report, and debate the key issues relating to the participation of Muslims in governance and public life in Britain.

We are particularly pleased to invite research from other European countries as well as from the British context, that will complement the work being done in Britain by our AHRC/ESRC project on Muslim Participation in Contemporary Governance in the UK. Authors of the papers selected for the day workshop will have an opportunity to be invited as contributors to an edited volume comparing developments in Muslim participation in governance in Britain and Europe.

Abstracts for papers on the following topics (and other cognate topics) are invited:
* Muslim representation through electoral politics, representative bodies, and other modes
* Community-based and partnership approaches to policing and counter-terrorism
* Muslim agency, governmentality, and the everyday state
* The development of Muslim civil society organisations
* Coordinated campaigns and lobbying on Islamophobia
* Muslim mobilisations in relation to multiculturalism, equalities, diversity, and cohesion
* The participation of Muslims and Muslim organisations in the ‘faith sector,’ in inter faith activities, and in faith-based service delivery
* Muslim mobilisations that link domestic, EU-level, and/or international governance
* Comparisons of Muslim participation in governance across states

Please submit abstracts of up to 300 words to Dr Therese O’Toole, Professor Tariq Modood, and Dr Daniel Nilsson DeHanas, (mpcg.uk@gmail.com).
Abstracts must be submitted by Noon on 15 December 2012 to be considered for inclusion.
For details on the Muslim Participation in Contemporary Governance (MPCG) project, please visit: http://www.bristol.ac.uk/ethnicity/projects/muslimparticipation/
MPCG is a project of the Centre for Ethnicity and Citizenship, in the School of Sociology, Politics and International Studies at the University of Bristol. The project is led by Dr Therese O’Toole, and funded by the Religion & Society Programme of the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the Economic and Social Sciences Research Council in the UK.===========================================
Dr Daniel Nilsson DeHanas
Centre for Ethnicity and Citizenship
School of Sociology, Politics and International Studies
University of Bristol 11 Priory RoadBristol BS8 1TUPhone: +44 (0)790 807 5719
Research Centre: http://bris.ac.uk/ethnicity
Muslim Participation in Contemporary Governance Project:
http://bris.ac.uk/ethnicity/projects/muslimparticipation

Challenging Consensus

Dear all,
please find attached description and programme of an interdisciplinary conference on “deviant” or “nonconformist” religion we have organised in Leipzig.
Title: “Challenging Consensus”
www.uni-leipzig.de/challenging_consensus
Best Wishes,
Christiane Königstedt,
M.A.University of Leipzig
Research Training Group:”Religious Non-Conformism and Cultural Dynamics”
Contact:c.koenigstedt@uni-leipzig.de

image

image

Jameel Scholarships, Cardiff University 2013-14

Jameel Scholarships, Cardiff University, 2013-14

The Islam-UK Centre at Cardiff University is pleased to invite applications for the Cardiff University Jameel Scholarships for 2013-14. The Islam-UK Centre works towards the promotion of better understanding of Islam and the life of Muslims in Britain, through high quality teaching and research. Its activities address issues which are central to the situation of Muslims in contemporary Britain. The Centre provides unique training and research opportunities for those seeking onward employment in a range of academic and non-academic careers.

The following fully funded scholarships are available from September 2013:

Cardiff University Jameel PhD Scholarships – 1 scholarship (starting 2013/14 academic year) We are seeking exceptional UK resident applicants with a first class, or upper second class honours degree or Masters degree. Research proposals in the following areas are particularly welcome: Education, Religious Leadership, British Muslim Arts and Heritage and Inter-Generational and Family Relations. Other research themes will be considered but must demonstrate exceptional academic merit, potential and relevance to Muslims or Islam in the UK.

Cardiff University Jameel MA Scholarships – 4 scholarships available for the MA in Islam in Contemporary Britain (September 2013 start) We are seeking exceptional UK resident applicants with a first or upper second class honours degree in a relevant subject, and demonstrated enthusiasm for working with or for Muslim communities in Britain.

Funding Package
Each successful Cardiff University Jameel Scholar has full UK/EU tuition fees paid and receives a generous stipend equivalent to an AHRC stipend plus access to a travel & conference allowance. Full-time PhD awards will provide funding for three years; full-time MA awards will provide funding for one year.

How to Apply
Full application instructions are available online at
http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/jameelscholarships
Closing date for MA Scholarship applications: 22 January 2013
Closing date for PhD Scholarship applications: 15 March 2013
For all enquiries, please contact us by email to jameelscholarships@cardiff.ac.uk

Religion and Politics Symposium at Calvin College Honoring Corwin Smidt

CFP Religion and Politics Symposium at Calvin College Honoring Corwin Smidt Seventh Biennial Symposium on Religion and Politics April 25-27, 2013 The Henry Institute for the Study of Christianity and Politics Calvin College, Grand Rapids, Michigan

The Paul B. Henry Institute will hold its seventh biennial Symposium on Religion and Politics from April 25 – 27, 2013 at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan. The purpose of this regular event is to provide opportunities to present current research, to foster personal and professional networks, to facilitate joint research endeavors, and to learn about research opportunities in the field. Symposium attendance is open to anyone interested in the intersection of religion and public life. The program will be held at the Prince Conference Center on the Calvin College campus.

An Invitation to Present Research and Writing

Participation in the Symposium is open to both scholars and graduate students across the disciplines. Those interested in presenting a paper on any aspect of the relationship between religion and public life (political theory, international relations, public policy, political history, comparative politics, electoral politics, public law, or the sociology of religion) should submit a one-page proposal by February 15, 2013. The proposal should include a tentative paper title, a brief description of the focus of the proposed paper (one to three paragraphs), your institutional affiliation, and your contact information, including an email address. Proposals received after February 15 will be considered on a space-available basis. Notification of accepted proposals will be no later than mid-March, 2013.

In honor of Dr. Corwin Smidt, who retired as the long-time Director of the Henry Institute in 2012, we issue a special invitation to present work in areas where Corwin has enriched our understanding of religion and politics, including religion and civil society, electoral politics, and clergy and politics.

We are also pleased to announce that two special opportunities will correspond with the Henry Symposium this year: the annual Kuyper Lecture, sponsored by the Center for Public Justice; and “Visualizing Public Life,” a show of student-generated visualizations of faith in the public sphere.

Correspondence
For additional information or to submit a proposal, please review the links below or contact:
Kevin R. den Dulk The Henry Institute 1810 E.
Beltline, SE Calvin College Grand Rapids, MI 49546-5951 616/526-6234
FAX: 616/526-8756
e-mail: kdendulk@calvin.edu
Website: www.calvin.edu/henry/conf

Politics and Religion Journal (PRJ)

Politics and  Religion  Journal (PRJ)

New Issue
Volume VI (No. 2) – Autumn 2012.

Table of contents

The word of guest editor

TOPIC OF THIS ISSUES
POLITICS AND RELIGION IN CONTEMPORARY CHINA

Joanna Wardega
Mao Zedong in Present-day China – Form of Deification
Weishan Huang
Bodhisattva Comes out of a Closet: City, Surveillance, and Doing Religion
Tsering Topgyal
The Securitisation of Tibetan Buddhism in Communist China
Raphael Israeli
Islam in China
Chaohua Wang
Old Sage for New Age? The Revival of Religious Confucianism in China

ANALYSES

Marcus Smith and Peter Marden
Politics, Policy and Faith: The Christian Right in Australia
Alberta Giorgi
Religious Associations in Lombardy: Values and Political Choices

REVIEWS, CRITICAL VIEWS AND POLEMICS

Hang Lin
Ancient Chinese Thought, Modern Chinese Power
Nika Sturm
The Serbian Politology of Religion Library

http://www.politicsandreligionjournal.com/index.phpoption=com_content&view=category&layout=blog&id=6&Itemid=3&lang=en
http://www.ipsa.org/news/journal/politics-and-religion-journal-prj-2?allblocks=1