Monthly Archives: December 2011

PhD Candidate Internship Opportunity – Research

The Role

Faith Matters is offering an internship initially for a period of 3 months, with the possibility of extension. This position would be of interest to PhD candidates with a research interest in areas including:

Islam in the Contemporary West; Radicalisation and Extremism.

The intern will be the Lead Researcher, working on a research project funded by the European Union. This project seeks to evaluate links between Conversion to Islam and Radicalisation; specifically in the context of the British Government’s PVE agenda but also more widely.

Therefore, the research aims, objective and topic has been pre-identified and this can be discussed in further detail with interested applicants. Initially, the successful applicant will be responsible for identifying and evaluating secondary sources and for the production of a literature review, before moving forward to design a research model for conducting further primary qualitative research.

There is a possibility to continue with Faith Matters to assist in conducting this research.

Location and Compensation

The Faith Matters Office is in Central London, however interns based outside of London may choose to discuss working remotely.

Interns will receive a stipend of £100 per dium including travel expenses; and we anticipate the internship to commence in the first week of January, although this is negotiable.

To apply

Interested applicants should be familiar with the subject area and possess strong analytical skills, and should submit their CV and a Covering Letter.

For further information, or to apply please contact Sarah Barnes sarahb@faith-matters.co.uk

Sarah Barnes

Project Manager

Faith Matters

0044 (0)207 935 5573

Journal of Contemporary Religion Vol. 27, No. 1 January 2012 Special Issue: Non-religion and Secularity

Peter B. Clarke: Tributes

Articles

Interdisciplinary Studies of Non-religion and Secularity: The State of the Union

Stephen Bullivant & Lois Lee

Three Puzzles of Non-religion in Britain

David Voas & Siobhan McAndrew

The Importance of Religious Displays for Belief Acquisition and Secularization

Jonathan A. Lanman

Organised Atheism in India: An Overview

Johannes Quack

The British Secular habitus and the War on Terror

Stacey Gutkowski

On the Receiving End: Discrimination Toward the Non-Religious in the United States

Ryan T. Cragun, Barry Kosmin, Ariela Keysar, Joseph H. Hammer & Michael Nielsen

Research Note: Talking about a Revolution: Terminology for the New Field of Non-religion Studies

Lois Lee

Book Reviews

Book Notes

Crossroads of Civilizations: Media, Religion and Culture

The International Conference

Crossroads of Civilizations: Media, Religion and Culture

July 8-12, 2012

Anadolu University

Eskisehir, TURKEY

(in between Istanbul and Ankara)

https://mrc.anadolu.edu.tr/index.html

Deadline for paper, panel, workshop, and roundtable proposals: January 31, 2012

The International Conference on Media, Religion, and Culture, organized every two years by the International Society for Media, Religion, and Culture, invites papers for its July 8-12, 2012 conference to be held in Eskisehir, Turkey (outside of Istanbul), at Anadolu University.

In contemporary societies, electronic media such as smart mobile phones, satellite television, radio, and laptop computers have become ubiquitous. Although historians point out that world religions have always been mediated by culture in some way, people have incorporated these electronic media into everyday practices, and industries and state organizations have arisen to profit from those practices, in ways that are unprecedented. Today’s media can connect people and ideas with one another, but they also foster misunderstandings and reinforce societal divisions. They may provide the means for the centralization of religious authority, or the means to undermine it. Scholars of religion, as well as scholars of media and of culture, must consider how these various societal institutions of the media interact with one another and with systems of religion, governance, and cultural practices, as our societies demand better means by which to understand emergent concerns in an increasingly interconnected, globalized context.

The contemporary location of Turkey has long been the meeting place between Eastern and Western culture, religion, trade, and communication.

This conference provides a crossroads for scholars, doctoral students, media professionals, and religious leaders from a variety of religious and secular traditions to meet and exchange ideas. Interdisciplinary scholarship is welcome, as is comparative work, theoretical development, and in-depth ethnographic studies that shed light on contemporary phenomena at the intersection of media, religion, and culture.

Papers, panels, workshops, and roundtable proposals could address, but should not be limited to:

* Global and Glocal Media and Religion(s)

* Mediation and Mediatization of Religion

* Media and The Boundaries of the Religious and the Secular

* Media, Power, Religion and Democracy

* Religion and Visual Expression

* Crossroads of Old/New Media and Religion

* Religion, Gender and Media

* Dialogue/Conflict: Media and Religion

* Islam and Media/ Islamic Media

* Social Media, Religion and Cultures

Presentation Formats

This year we will be accepting proposals in four formats: papers,

panels, workshops and roundtables.

Panels bring together in discussion four participants or presentations

representing a range of ideas and projects. Roundtables may include more

individuals who comment on a common theme in briefer formats.

Panels and roundtables are scheduled for 90 minutes and should include a

mix of individuals working in areas of research, theory, and practice.

We also encourage the use of discussants.

Workshops provide an opportunity for hands-on exploration and/or project

development. They can be organized around a core challenge that

participants come together to work on or around a tool, platform, or

concept. Workshops are scheduled for 90 minutes and should be highly

participatory.

Association for the Sociology of Religion

2012 Annual Meeting

Religion and Social Change

https://www.sociologyofreligion.com/annual-meeting/

The 2012 annual meeting of the Association for the Sociology of Religion will take place August 17-18 in Denver, Colorado at the Grand Hyatt. The Grant Hyatt is a Four Diamond hotel in the heart of downtown Denver, close to restaurants, shopping and entertainment, including the world famous Tattered Cover bookstore.

Our 2012 meeting will take place immediately prior to the meetings of the ASA’s religion section, but will not overlap with those sessions.

This will allow members to attend sessions at both meetings in a shorter window than previous years. The Grant Hyatt is a block away from the ASA conference hotel, the Hyatt Regency.

The theme of this year’s meeting is religion and social change. Most religions traditions are predicated upon the idea that conversion transforms the individual and widespread acceptance of religious principles results in a utopian society. Some religions attempt to produce or prevent change by influencing the wider discourse surrounding key moral and political debates; others promote programs at the local level; and still others, viewing society as beyond repair, attempt to produce their own utopian sub-societies. Yet, religion is also the product of social changes that mold beliefs and transform religious institutions.

While we welcome papers on all subjects, we expect many presentations to explore the complex relationship between religion and social change.

Further, this year’s meeting will have a strong focus on professional development with special sessions on funding and disseminating research, navigating the tenure process, publishing and writing, and resources available for research. These sessions will include a panel with the editors of Sociology of Religion and Review of Religious Research.

LCD projectors and screens will be available for all presentations.

DEADLINES:

-Session Proposals are due by 31 March 2012 -Paper Proposals and Abstracts are due by 30 April 2012

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES: (1) Email your proposal to ASR2012@augustana.edu as a Word attachment. Place the title of your proposal first, then names, affiliations, and email addresses of all authors, then your abstract/proposal, all on one sheet of paper. (2) Limit paper abstracts to a maximum of 100 words. (3) 2012 membership in ASR is required for program consideration (one author, for multiauthored papers). Do not submit proposals prior to 1 January. PROGRAM CHAIR: Christopher Bader, Chapman University.

Positions, The Max-Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity in Göttingen

https://www.mmg.mpg.de/fileadmin/user_upload/Stellen/Ausschreibungen_Stellen_Fellow_M._Koenig.pdf

The Max-Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity in Göttingen

is establishing a new research group on legal regulations of religious diversity in modern nation-states. In comparative perspective, the research group will study the global diffusion of regulatory models; religious/secular conflicts in constitutional politics; and negotiations of religious rights in judicial arenas. Within the research group, the following positions are to be filled at the earliest possible date:

1. a post-doctoral researcher (sociology)

specializing in sociology of religion, political sociology, and/or socio-legal studies. The position is remunerated in equivalence to German civil service standards (level TVöD E13, full-time) and is to be filled for a period of two years (renewable after positive evaluation).

The candidate’s primary task is to develop and carry out research projects that closely fit within the above-mentioned field of study.

S/he is also expected to contribute to teaching in the Department of Sociology at the Georg-August-University of Göttingen (2 SWS, English or German). Requirements are an excellent PhD in sociology, expertise in empirical research methods, and a publication record with articles in international peer-reviewed journals.

2. a doctoral researcher (sociology)

specialized in sociology of religion, political sociology and/or socio-legal studies. The position is remunerated in equivalence to German civil service standards (level TVöD E13, half-time) and is to be filled for a period of three years. The candidate will contribute to research projects within the above-mentioned field of study and work on her/his own dissertation. S/he is also expected to contribute to teaching in the Department of Sociology at the Georg-August-University of Göttingen (1 SWS). Requirements are an excellent Master’s degree in sociology or a related discipline and solid experience in empirical research projects.

3. a (post)-doctoral fellowship (sociology) for one or a half year fitting into the program of the research group.

Requirements are a PhD (for post-doc) or an excellent Master’s degree in sociology or a related discipline.

The Max Planck Society wishes to increase the participation of women wherever they are underrepresented; therefore, applications from women are particularly welcome. Following its commitment to an equal opportunities employment policy, the Max Planck Society also especially encourages persons with a disability to submit their applications.

Please send your applications electronically (pdf), including your plans for research, a curriculum vitae and list of publications, by 06 January 2012, to albern@mmg.mpg.de.

For further information please contact Matthias Koenig, Max Planck Fellow and Professor at the Georg-August-University of Göttingen, at albern@mmg.mpg.de

1st Call for Papers - ESA - RN 34: Sociology of Religion, Sept. 3-5, 2012 in Potsdam/Germany

ESA Research Network 34 - Sociology of Religion 

in cooperation with the        

German Section for Religionssoziologie in the DGS

Call for papers - Mid-term Conference 

University of Potsdam,, Germany, 3-5 September 2012 

Transformations of the Sacred in Europe and Beyond 

The thesis of secularization, once sheer uncontested in the social sciences, is increasingly 

under fire. Secularization is nowadays often deconstructed as an ideology or mere wish dream 

that is intimately connected to the rationalist ambitions of modern Enlightenment. Such 

alleged blurring of morality and science, of what ‘is’ and what ‘ought’, informing sociological 

analysis obviously obscures clear sight on recent developments in the Western world.  

Countless empirical and theoretical studies convincingly demonstrate that religion is 

alive and well in Europe and beyond. Particularly after the attacks of 9/11 in 2001, religious 

identities have become salient in a situation of cultural polarization and religious 

pluralization. Moreover, we are witnessing a trend towards ‘believing without belonging’ 

(Davie, 1994) and – particularly in those European countries that are most secular – a shift 

from organized religion to ‘spiritualities of life’ (e.g., Heelas and Woodhead, 2005), paganism 

and ‘popular religion’ (Knoblauch, 2009). And although the thesis of secularization has 

always been highly problematic from a non-European or global perspective, the rapid 

globalization of Islam and the Evangelical upsurge – especially in Africa, Latin America and 

East Asia – fly in the face of the long-held expectation that religion is doomed to be a 

marginal or socially insignificant phenomenon.  

Evidently, then, the focus of sociological analysis has shifted over the last decades 

from religious decline to religious change. More than that: it is theorized that we are living in 

a “post-secular society” (Habermas, 2005) where religion is re-vitalized, de-privatized and 

increasingly influences politics, voting behavior, matters of the state and ethical debates in the 

public domain (e.g., Casanova, 1994). Motivated by such observations, the mid-term 

conference calls for papers addressing changes in the field of religion and, more in particular, 

transformations of the sacred in Europe and beyond. Particularly we welcome studies 

covering the following topics:   

• Studies on how and why conceptions of the sacred, religious beliefs, doctrines, rituals 

and organizations of long-standing religious traditions – such as Islam, Christianity, 

Judaism, Buddhism or Hinduism – transform under the influence of processes of 

globalization, individualization, mediatization as well as changing gender relations.  

• Studies dealing with trends of believing without belonging, i.e. non-institutionalized 

beliefs, personal ‘bricolage’ and privatized conceptions of the sacred outside the 

Churches, Chapels and Mosques. Encouraged are also studies addressing new, more 

informal ways of ‘belonging’, religious communication and collective effervescence, 

i.e. in loose social networks, discussion groups or virtual communities on the internet.  

• Studies covering popular religion and post-traditional spirituality, i.e., New Age, 

esotericism, paganism, occultism, discussing for instance an epistemological turn from 

belief to experience and emotion; a shifting emphasis from transcendence to 

immanence; from seriousness to playfulness; or a transition from dualism to monism. 

Studies dealing with implicit religion, i.e. addressing a re-location of the sacred to 

seemingly secular domains in society such as self-identity, sports, modern science and 

technology. This avenue of research may also include the place and meaning of the 

sacred (i.e., religious narratives, symbols and images) in popular media texts – in 

novels, films, series on television or computer games.  

These topics are rough guidelines; papers dealing with religious change and the 

transformation of the sacred in Europe and beyond other than these outlined above are also 

very welcome. Furthermore we invite PhD and post-doc candidates to contribute to a poster 

session, including work in progress; the best poster will get a – small, but nice – prize.  

Dates & Deadlines in 2012 

March 15  Submission of abstracts and online registration starts  

April 20  Submission of abstracts ends  

May 10  Acceptance of abstracts  

June 30  Early-bird registration ends 

September 3 – 5 Conference 

Conference Fees:  

for ESA-Members & Students: € 30,- plus € 20,- for Conference Buffet 

for Non-Members € 50,- plus € 20,- for Conference Buffet 

for late registration € 80,- plus € 20,- for Conference Buffet 

For further information, please visit: https://www.esareligion.org

Contact: esa-religion@uni-potsdam.de

Conference Venue 

The University of Potsdam turned 20 this year. 

More than 20,000 students are enrolled in more 

than 100 degree programmes, located at three 

different sites. The mid-term conference will take 

place at Griebnitzsee Campus, which is directly 

located at the S-Bahn that connects Potsdam City 

and Berlin. 

Eurel Conference 2012, Religion and Territory

Manchester, United Kingdom, 25-26 October 2012

Call for papers

Papers are invited for an international conference jointly organized by the Eurel network of sociologists and legal scholars of religion (https://www.eurel.info/ led by the research centre PRISME-SDRE UMR 7012, University of Strasbourg), and CRESC – the Centre for Research on Socio-Cultural Change, University of Manchester.

Keynote speakers

- Silvio Ferrari, Professor of Canon Law at the University of Milan and Professor of Church-State Relations at the University of Leuven, ‘Law, Religion and Collective Identities’.

- Ian Gregory, Reader in Digital Humanities, Lancaster University, ‘Long-term Religious Change and Stability in Ireland: A Geographical Analysis’.

- Ceri Peach, Emeritus Professor of Social Geography, University of Oxford, ‘Islam and the Art of Mosque Construction in Western Europe’.

Eurel is both an important information resource created by leading sociologists and legal scholars in the field of religion, and a network of these scholars. It is opening its biennial meeting to interested researchers active in these fields, with a focus during this first colloquium on religion and territory. This meeting will take place on October 25- 26 2012, as a 1.5 day event.

Following the ‘spatial turn’, we have much to learn about the spatial mechanisms of religious change. Although significant progress has been made in the wider field of religious geography, there is considerable scope for further research into the spatial analysis of religious data using formal methods: a new and promising field.

Equally, the growing religious diversity of Europe has provided social and institutional challenges, with responses differing greatly both across Europe and at different levels of government within countries.

Bioethics, the position of religious minorities, faith schools and religious education, the separation of church and state, religious involvement in the public sphere, and responses to extremism are all areas where legal institutions, political interests and public attitudes interact in important ways, and differently so across space and institutional and national boundaries.

This suggests an important role for legal scholars, sociologists and geographers to engage in empirically-based discussion of religious change.

We particularly welcome proposals covering, but not exclusive to, the following areas:

• The relationship between religious reconstructions and spatial dynamics

• Religion and migration, particularly the impact of spatial change on religion

• New forms of religious participation and reorganization of territorial frameworks

• Local/regional vs. national/European legal treatment of religious groups

• Urban space and religion: spatial strategies of religious communities and public policy, such as land use regulation and development control, and their effects on the development of places of worship

• Discussion of methodological advances in the field, including new mapping tools and analytic tools

• Investigating religion and geography - geographical distribution of religiosity or cross-national comparison of allied issues such as religious prejudice.

Scholars wishing to present a paper should send an abstract and a brief biography as soon as possible and not later than January 11, 2012. Paper abstracts and CVs should be sent to Anne-Laure Zwilling via e-mail at:

anne-laure.zwilling@misha.cnrs.fr

The abstract will be reviewed by the conference organising committee and a response will be sent by 28 February 2012.

The conference will take place at Chancellors Hotel (https://www.chancellorshotel.co.uk), located close to Manchester Airport (8km), which has excellent international links.

Conference organizing committee:

- Jonas Bromander, Unit for Research & Culture, Church of Sweden, jonas.bromander@svenskakyrkan.se

- Niall Cunningham, CRESC, University of Manchester, niall.cunningham@manchester.ac.uk

- Siobhan McAndrew, University of Manchester, siobhan.mcandrew@manchester.ac.uk

- Michał Zawiślak, Catholic University of Lublin, m.zawislak@ewst.pl

- Anne-Laure Zwilling, CNRS-Strasbourg, anne-laure.zwilling@misha.cnrs.fr

PRISME-SDRE: https://sdre.misha.fr/

EUREL: https://www.eurel.info/

CRESC: https://www.cresc.ac.uk/

Call for Papers for special issue of Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education: An International Journal

Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education: An International Journal (Taylor & Francis;

https://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/journal.asp?issn=1559-5692&linktype=1)

invites contributions for an upcoming guest edited volume on Migration, Religion, and Education.

The continuing salience of religion as a fundamental basis for identity and belonging, and as an on-going focal point of political struggles across the world has shaken to its core the narrative projecting a final “global triumph” of liberal democracy in the post-Cold War era. Religion still matters a great deal, both publicly and privately. And religion has always had important linkages to migration and cultural diversity.

As Bramadat (2009) indicates, religion is quite powerfully related to many of the most complex features of migration today; it is often involved in conflicts driving people to flee their home countries, it is used in political resistance struggles (both in the “homeland” and the diaspora), and it very typically serves as a foundation for the social structures of newly arrived minority communities in host societies. Each of these illustrations has important connections to education; religiously persecuted refugees may utilize their cultural (and specifically religious) capital to their advantage in schooling in host societies that privilege rather than severely disadvantage their faith traditions, diasporic communities may use non-formal and informal education methods to mobilize their members around a religiously framed cause, churches and mosques may create schools within immigrant neighborhoods to serve as anchors for the passing on of tradition as well as the cultivation of ethno-specific forms of social capital.

This special issue invites papers from a diversity of international perspectives and country contexts, and from a variety of education disciplines, to address the theme of migration, religion, and education.

Education should be considered broadly to include all stages / levels of formal education, as well as non-formal and informal education.

Possible topics include but are not limited to:

* religion and identity among migrant students

* the “problematization” of religious minority students in host society schools

* representation of migrant’s religions in school curricula

* religious literacy among education policy makers

* religious awareness among teachers and administrators

* religion as a form of cultural capital among migrant students

* religion and migrant teachers

* court decisions bearing on the religious identities and practices of migrant students

Please send abstracts to Bruce Collet colleba@bgsu.edu by February 15, 2012. Responses to submitted abstracts will be sent by April 2012. Full article submissions from invited papers will be due July 1, 2012. Papers invited for the special issue will undergo blind review procedures.

Reviews of relevant books are also encouraged.

ABTRACTS should be submitted according to the following format:

(TITLE)

(AUTHOR/S FULL NAME)

(AUTHOR/S AFFILIATION AND FULL ADDRESS INCLUDING E-MAIL) (ABSTRACT UP TO 600 WORDS NOT INCLUDING REFERENCES- TIME NEW ROMAN 12

POINTS)

(REFERENCES)

Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education: An International Journal

(DIME) is a quarterly peer-reviewed journal focused on critical discourse and research in diaspora, indigenous, and minority education.

The journal is dedicated to researching cultural sustainability in a world increasingly consolidating under national, transnational, and global organizations. It aims to draw attention to, and learn from, the many initiatives being conducted around the globe in support of diaspora, indigenous, and minority education, which might otherwise go unnoticed.

Bruce Collet

Bowling Green State University

Secular State and Religious Society: Two Forces in Play in Turkey

Edited by Berna Turam  

Palgrave Macmillan

https://us.macmillan.com/secularstateandreligioussociety/BernaTuram

Ever since the highly controversial appointment of a pious president in the secular Turkish Republic in 2007, both the Turkish state and society have been deeply divided over the issue of piety and Muslim politics. The essays in this book reveal that state secularism and religious society mutually form, inform and transform each other. The contributors use fresh data and a variety of primary research methods to explore all the facets of the state-society relationship and consider the implications of their findings for freedom and democracy in the state.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Secular State and Pious Muslims: Neither Rivals nor Allies for Life - Berna Turam 

The Dynamic Nature of Educational Policies and Turkish Nation-Building: Where Does Religion Fit In? - Yesim Bayar 

Islam, Nation-State, and the Military: A Discussion of Secularism in Turkey - Sinem Gurbey 

Secularists as the Saviors of Islam: Rearticulation of Secularism and the Freedom of Conscience in Turkey (1950) - Umut Azak  

Does Secularism Face a Serious Threat in Turkey? - Metin Heper 

Christian and Turkish: Secularist Fears of a Converted Nation - Esra Ozyurek  

Market Oriented Post-Islamism in Turkey - Tugrul Keskin 

Conflict, Democratic Reform and Big Business: Factors Shaping the Economic Elite’s Position for Change - Devrim Yavuz 

Toward Conceptual Integration of Religious Actors in Democracy and Civil Society - Aviad Rubin * Afterword - Murat Gunes Tezcur

Biological and Cultural Evolution and Their Interactions: Rethinking the Darwinian and Durkheimian Legacy in the Context of the Study of Religion

Call for papers and poster proposals

International Conference at the Section for the Study of Religion, Faculty of Arts, Aarhus University, 26– 30 June 2012.

2012 marks the centennial of Durkheim’s Les formes élémentaires de la vie religieuse. The Section for the Study of Religion at Aarhus University will be celebrating the centennial by revitalizing one prominent aspect of Durkheim’s work, i.e., the evolutionary question. Cultural evolutionary thinking had its heyday from 1870-1920, and for various reasons, a deep skepticism of biological and cultural evolutionary thinking became entrenched in the humanities. It not only turned its back on evolutionary perspectives but also on science in general. Broader questions pertaining to human biology and cultural evolution were largely dismissed with a few notable exceptions such as Robert Bellah, Shmuel Eisenstadt and Jan Assmann.

The aim of the present conference is to revisit evolutionary questions with a special focus on the study of religion. We think that progress in the field of cognitive science may enable us to once again raise a number of classic evolutionary questions in a fashion which avoids the pitfalls of the ideologically loaded presumptions of Western and Christian superiority of former days. New insights in cognitive science and evolutionary psychology have provided new opportunities for merging biological and cultural evolutionary perspectives. This combination gives us the unique possibility of once again understanding humans from the Durkheimian perspective of homo duplex, i.e., both natural and cultural beings. In order to examine the possibilities for revitalizing evolutionary questions in biology and culture and their interactions in the context of the study of religion, we have invited a number of prominent scholars with an interest in evolutionary questions. Keynote lectures will be given by: Robert Bellah, Pascal Boyer, Jan Bremmer, Joseph Bulbulia, Merlin Donald, Eva Jablonka, Russel Gray, Bernhard Lang, Alexandra Maryanski, Doron Mendels, Guy Stroumsa and Jonathan Turner.

The conference is hosted by the Section for the Study of Religion, the Laboratory on Theories of Religion and the Religion, Cognition and Culture Research Unit (RCC) at Aarhus University, and the Aarhus University Research Foundation. The International Association for the Cognitive Science of Religion (IACSR) will also be hosting its workshop in connection with the conference.

Proposals for papers and posters should be sent to Anders Klostergaard Petersen (akp@teo.au.dk) by March 1, 2012. Please send an abstract of maximum 500 words. Acceptance of papers and posters will be announced by the end of March 2012.

The deadline for registration for the conference will be April 15, 2012. A conference homepage will be available from the beginning of January.

The conference fee will be $200 (students and retirees $150). Further information will be made available when the conference site is opened.

Conference organizers:

Anders Klostergaard Petersen

Hans Jørgen Lundager Jensen

Armin W. Geertz