Monthly Archives: September 2014

Call for Papers: BSA Annual Conference: “Societies in Transition”, April 15-17 2015 (abstracts due October 17, 2014)

BRITISH SOCIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2015 SOCIETIES IN TRANSITION: PROGRESSION OR REGRESSION?
Glasgow Caledonian University, April 15-17 2015

ABSTRACT SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 17 OCTOBER 2014  https://www.britsoc.co.uk/events/bsa-annual-conference.aspx

 

SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION STREAM PLENARY: PROFESSOR STEVE BRUCE
Steve Bruce has been Professor of Sociology at Aberdeen since 1991. He is a Fellow of the British Academy and the Royal Society of Edinburgh. He has published widely on the relationship between religion and politics in Britain and is a leading theorist and historian of secularization. His recent books include Scottish Gods: Religion in Modern Scotland (Edinburgh University Press 2014), Politics and Religion in the United Kingdom (Routledge 2012) and Secularization: In Defence of an Unfashionable Theory (Oxford University Press 2011).

SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION STREAM CALL FOR PAPERS
This year’s BSA Annual Conference calls on sociologists “to ask ourselves how our research and knowledge base might allow us to address a broad range of multi-dimensional social ills and to consider how our work might inform the construction of a ‘Good Society’ for the 21st century.” This stream will explore the contribution that the sociology of religion can make to this discussion, by analysing the changing role and voice of religion in society.

Possible topics could include (but are not limited to) the following:
*       The role of religion in times of social transition
*       The changing place of religion in society
*       Faith communities and social action
*       Religion and politics
*       Religion and education
*       Religion, media and the press
*       Theoretical perspectives on religion and social change

All paper abstracts and proposals for other events can be submitted online at: https://www.britsoc.co.uk/events/bsa-annual-conference/submissions.aspx

If you would like your abstract to be considered within the Sociology of Religion stream, please type SOCREL in capital letters at the top of your abstract. The deadline for submission of abstracts is 17 OCTOBER 2014.

For further information contact the Sociology of Religion stream coordinator, Tim Hutchings, at t.r.b.hutchings@dur.ac.uk . Alternatively, contact the BSA Events Team: events@britsoc.org.uk 

CFP: Islamophobia: Gender, Sexuality, Racism

Special Issue of the Islamophobia Studies Journal

Abstracts due: October 10, 2014
Full Articles due: March 2, 2015

This special issue of Islamophobia Studies Journal (ISJ) aims to generate and circulate new knowledge about the relationship between Islamophobia, gender, sexuality and racism.

See detailed announcement at https://crg.berkeley.edu/content/islamophobiagendersex?utm_source=isa+announcements+2014&utm_campaign=4b2fe4e5ba-&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_a55c5ed630-4b2fe4e5ba-92141177

Abstracts of 500 words are due by October 10, 2014 to islamophobia.racism.gender.sex@gmail.com.

Full articles of no more than 8,000 words are due on March 2, 2015.

Abstracts submitted for the special issue of IJS may also be considered for a subsequent larger anthology on Islamophobia: Gender, Sexuality and Racism to be co-edited by Rabab Abdulhadi and Paola Bacchetta. Please specify at the time of submission if you would like your manuscript to be considered for the Islamophobia Studies Journal, the book or both.

Tenure-Track Assistant Professor of Global Sociology - Kansas State University

The Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work at Kansas State University invites applications for a tenure track position as Assistant Professor of Sociology, to begin August 2015. We seek a productive scholar with expertise in global sociology. The successful candidate will have a strong publication record and demonstrate success in, or exceptional promise for, securing external funding to support their research. Preference will be given to candidates whose expertise complement and/or extend existing faculty strengths in social movements, culture, and development. Additional preference will be given to candidates who can contribute to one or more of the following interdisciplinary areas identified by the university as grand challenges: global food systems, water, community vitality, and health. The successful candidate will contribute to the undergraduate and graduate programs in sociology by teaching (two courses per semester), advising, and mentoring graduate (M.A. and Ph.D.) students. A Ph.D. in Sociology is required at the time of appointment. Applicants should submit a letter of interest, curriculum vitae, one example of their strongest written work, three letters of reference, and a summary of teaching experience. These materials should be sent in one PDF attachment to socansw Inquiries should be sent to Matthew Sanderson: mattrs or Matthew Sanderson, Chair of Global Sociology Search Committee, Kansas State University, Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work, 204 Waters Hall, Manhattan, KS 66506-4003. Review of applications will begin on November 1, 2014, and continue until the position is filled. Applications received by November 1 will receive full consideration. Incomplete applications will not be reviewed. Kansas State University is an Equal Opportunity Employer of individuals with disabilities and protected veterans. Kansas State University actively seeks diversity among its employees. Women and minority scholars are strongly encouraged to apply. A background check is required prior to hiring.

Call for Papers

Christian Monasticism from East to West
Monastic Traditions and Modernity in Europe
International Conference - University of Graz (Austria)
17-19 June 2015

Since its foundation in the deserts of Syria and Egypt, Christian monasticism spread not only throughout all continents – until more recently in sub-Saharan Africa – but also branched out according to the different confessions present in Christianity, meaning Catholic, Orthodox and Anglican monasticism. Today, from Eastern to Western Europe, what are the common elements and the differentiation points between these diverse monastic traditions? What is at stake for them within religious modernity, whether within a context of loss of trust in traditional  institutions and decline of religious practice or religious renewal post-communism societies?

Between crises and adaption of thousand-year-old communities, refoundations after years of suppression or a wish to invent a new tradition (new monastic communities for instance), how is the relationship to monastic tradition reconfigured? What is the place of monasticism in society, and how are these spiritual, economic or cultural links to society structured? How are they perceived in the public space and in the media? Through the secularization we also observe a phenomenon of “consuming tradition” where monastic tradition itself becomes a consumer product for publics, which are no longer interested in the religious dimension of monasteries.

This conference will provide the opportunity to sum up the situation of Christian monasticism in the delimitated but diversified geographic areas of Europe and to raise current issues according to each social context. Through debates started at this conference, the opportunity will be also given to initiate comparative reflections about these different monastic traditions.

The conference languages are German, French and English. Abstracts of 400 words are requested to the following address isabelle.jonveaux@uni-graz before October 31th. The
abstract should be in the chosen language of the planned lecture; if German or French, an additional abstract in English is required. They can concern different topics such as: monastic spirituality, place of monasticism in society, activities of work and economy, media, new communities and foundations. Papers from the fields of sociology of religions, religious studies, and theology are welcome.

This conference is conjointly organized by the Institute of Religious Studies and the Institute of Ecumenical Theology, Orthodox Theology and Patrology of the University of Graz and will take place there. It will be also supported by the Benedictine Abbey
of Admont. Travel and accommodations costs are in charge of participants.

Scientific Board:
Dr. Isabelle Jonveaux
(University of Graz, CEIFR/EHESS Paris)
Prof. Dr. Dr. Pablo
Argárate (University of Graz)
Dr. Mirel Banica (Institut
of History of Religions, Bucarest)
Dr. Stefania Palmisano
(University of Turin)

Homepage: https://religionswissenschaft.uni-graz.at/de/aktuelles/

Appel à communications

Thu Sep 25, 2014 3:30 am (PDT) . Posted by:

“Jonveaux Isabelle” isabellejonveaux

Le monachisme de l’Est à l’Ouest
Traditions monastiques et modernité en Europe
Conférence Internationale
17-19 juin 2015, Graz (Autriche)

Depuis sa fondation dans les déserts de Syrie et d’Egypte, le monachisme chrétien s’est non seulement déployé sur tous les continents, jusqu’à récemment l’Afrique sub-saharienne, mais s’est aussi ramifié selon les différentes confessions que compte le christianisme, donnant ainsi naissance à un monachisme catholique, orthodoxe et anglican. Aujourd’hui, de l’Est à l’Ouest de l’Europe, quels sont les déterminants communs et les points de différenciation de ces différentes traditions monastiques ? Quels sont leurs enjeux dans la modernité religieuse, que ce soit dans un contexte de perte de confiance dans les institutions traditionnelles et recul de la pratique, ou renouveau religieux dans les sociétés post-communisme ?

Entre crise et adaptation des communautés millénaires, refondations après des années de suppression du monachisme ou désir d’invention d’une nouvelle tradition (lesdites communautés nouvelles par exemple), comment se reconfigure le rapport à la tradition monastique ? Quelle est la place du monachisme dans la société qui l’entoure et comment se structurent ces liens, qu’ils soient spirituels, économiques ou culturels ? Comment sont-ils perçus dans l’espace public et les médias ? En régime de sécularisation, s’observe un phénomène de consommation de la tradition dans lequel la tradition monastique elle-même devient un produit de consommation pour des publics qui ne sont plus intéressés aux dimensions religieuses des monastères.

Ce colloque sera l’occasion de faire le point sur le monachisme chrétien à l’intérieur de l’ère
géographique délimitée mais diversifiée de l’Europe et d’interroger les problématiques actuelles selon les différents contextes sociaux. Les débats engagés lors de cette conférence seront aussi l’occasion d’initier des réflexions comparatives sur ces différentes traditions monastiques.

Les langues de la conférence sont l’allemand, l’anglais et le français. Les propositions de
communication devront compter 400 mots et parvenir à cette adresse isabelle.jonveaux@uni-graz.at avant le 31 octobre 2014. Les résumés doivent être rédigés dans la langue choisie pour la communication ; un résumé supplémentaire est requis en cas de choix de l’allemand ou du français. Ils peuvent concerner différents thèmes que sont la spiritualité monastique, la place du monachisme dans la société, les activités de travail et d’économie, médias, les nouvelles communautés et refondations. Les travaux issus de la sociologie des religions, des sciences des religions ou encore de la théologie sont les
bienvenus.

Cette conférence est organisée conjointement par l’Institut de Sciences des Religions et l’Institut de Théologie Œcuménique, de Théologie Orthodoxe et de Patrologie de
l’Université de Graz et se déroulera sur place. Elle est aussi soutenue par l’Abbaye d’Admont. Les frais de voyage et d’hébergement sont à la charge des participants.

Comité scientifique
Dr. Isabelle
Jonveaux (Université de Graz, CEIFR/EHESS Paris)
Prof. Dr. Dr. Pablo
Argárate (Université de Graz)
Dr. Mirel Banica (Institut
d’Histoire des Religions, Bucarest)
Dr. Stefania
Palmisano (Université de Turin)

Site Internet: https://religionswissenschaft.uni-graz.at/de/aktuelles/
(Les informations seront mises en ligne au fur et à mesure)

Call for Application: PhD position

PhD position

Mecca in Morocco: Negotiating the Meanings of Hajj in Everday Life
(vacancy number: 214261) University of Groningen, The Netherlands.
https://www.rug.nl/about-us/ work-with-us/job- opportunities/overview? details=00347-02S000482P

Job description

The research project consists of extensive ethnographic fieldwork in Morocco to investigate the meanings and sociocultural embeddedness of pilgrimage to Mecca in contemporary Moroccan society.

The PhD study is one of the subprojects in a larger NWO (The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Researchl) funded cooperation between the University of Groningen and the University of Amsterdam for a project that studies modern articulations of pilgrimage to Mecca (Hajj/Umra). Approaching pilgrimage from the perspective of ‘lived religion’, the project in which the PhD student will participate addresses the question how references to religiosity, social identifications and self-identity in personal pilgrimage accounts reflect the ways in which the habitus of narrators is informed by various cultural discourses simultaneously.

The PhD student is expected:
· to have an excellent master’s diploma (preferably a Research master) in Cultural Anthropology or another relevant discipline (by 1 November 2014 at latest)
· ample experience with ethnographic fieldwork
· to be ambitious, highly motivated and wishing to make a career in research
· to be fluent in English (both oral and written)
· to have an excellent profiency in (oral) Arabic, preferably the Moroccan-Arabic dialect
· to be able and willing to work in an interdisciplinary environment
· to have the abilities to finish the PhD thesis in four years; i.e. good skills in planning, taking initiatives, academic writing.

For more information, please contact:
dr. Marjo Buitelaar: m.w.buitelaar@rug.nl

Call for Applications: Post-Doctoral Research Fellowship

 

Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages - Post-Doctoral Research Fellowship in the study of central aspects of the development of Islam as a religious tradition https://uio.easycruit.com/vacancy/1207991/62042?iso=no

Post-Doctoral Research Fellowship is available at the Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages, University of Oslo. The Research Fellowship is dedicated to the study of central aspects of the development of Islam as a religious tradition, based on a thorough knowledge of the classical Arabic language and of Arab-language Muslim culture.

The successful candidate is expected to become part of the research environment/network of the department and contribute to its development. The main purpose of postdoctoral research fellowships is to qualify researchers for work in higher academic positions within their disciplines.

The appointment is for a period of two years (2015-2016).

Conference Invitation: Imams in Western Europe – Authority, Training, and Institutional Challenges, Rome 5-7 N ovember 2014

Imams in Western Europe – Authority, Training, and Institutional Challenges

www.imamsofthewest.com

5-6-7 November 2014

LUISS Guido Carli University &

John Cabot American University

Rome, Italy

Conceptual Framework

The social facts of globalization, transnational migration and the various interpretations of secularism have challenged the visibility of religion in the public sphere in “Western” societies. This has most importantly and urgently required religious authorities to revisit their organization, governance and internal hierarchy, which link believers and their community to God. Islamic religious authority is no exception. All over the Islamic world and Europe, Islamic religious authority is still struggling to negotiate its place among the institutions of the modern state. The imamate is one of the institutions that is experiencing a shift in roles and functions in society amidst these institutions.

The religious affairs of the early Muslim community in Europe after WWII were hardly institutional, and consequently lacked state recognition and its support, as well as professional and trained Imams. Without formal prayer spaces, they were also poorly organized and officially “Imam-less.” Muslims themselves had either to choose a respected believer to become their leader of prayers or, afterwards, sought to import an Imam from their own village or city in the country of origin. Because the situation of religious education in the wider Islamic world was still in the making in the postcolonial era, these imported imams had either a conservative education and were not open to modern state institutions or to liberal multicultural society, or they were not trained as Imams at all, but were lay men who had learnt the Quran, or part of it, by heart at the madrassas (al massid or al kuttab), and not at modern schools or universities.

On arrival in Europe, these Imams faced considerable problems. They often lacked the mastery of the language of the host country, and mostly lacked the understanding of the place of religion in the public space, and the role of religious authority within the community of believers. Also, the economic difficulties of these early “guest-workers” contributed to making institutionalized religious training and schooling unthinkable. The international rise of political Islam, the flow of funds of the Muslim communities from the countries of origin (through embassies and international religious movements), and the internal increasing “fear of Islamism” and the “feel of Islamophobia” made the idea of home-grown Imams beyond the scope of policy-making and state institutions at first. However, terrorist attacks (9/11, 7/7, etc.), increasing state surveillance of Islamic religious affairs, as well as the Muslim community need for recognized religious authority in European societies have made the idea again thinkable.

The last decade witnessed a remarkable increase in debates over the necessity to ground European Islam on the European soil, and through state institutions. Islamic representatives and schools are building partnerships with prestigious universities in the UK, France, Germany, and the Netherlands, for co-designed religious curricula and for the training of home-grown imams and the establishment of a domestic religious authority.

Conference Themes

· Imams in Islamic scholarship: intellectual requirements and the scope of action within religious scholarly authority

· Muslim religious authority and their representative bodies in Western Europe

· The Muslim community’s authority over the Imam: the social stratum

· The importation of Imams and their geographical distribution in Western Europe

· The prospects of developing “home-grown” Imams: mosques, Islamic schools, university departments of theology, and possible partnerships

· Imams’ training and the job market

· Imams, politics, and the media

· Imams and civic engagement: ethics, spirituality, environment, social justice, multiculturalism, etc.

· Comparative perspectives: best practices of religious national institutions and Imam training in Western Europe

Keynote speakers

Hilary Kalmbach (Sussex University, UK)

Jasser Auda (Faculty of Islamic Studies in Doha, Qatar)

Jonathan Laurence (Political Science at Boston College, USA)

Marco Ventura (Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium)

Olivier Roy (European University Institute, Italy)

Stefano Allievi (University of Padova, Italy)

Confirmed speakers

Abdullah Sahin (The Markfield Institute of Higher Education, UK), Cedric Beyloq (Mundiapolis University, Casablanca, Morocco), Domenico Melidoro (LUISS University, Rome), Mansur Ali (Cardiff University, UK), Egdunas Racius (Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania), Evrim Ersan Akkilic (Universität Wien, Austria), Farid El Asri (Louvain University, Belgium), Francesco Alicino (University LUM Jean Monnet University of Bari, Italy), Goran Larsson (University of Gothenburg, Sweden), Imam Yahya Pallavicini (Italy), Jan Jaap de Ruiter (Tilburg University, Netherlands), Jorgen Nielsen (University of Birmingham, UK), Juan Ferreiro Galguera (Universidade da Coruña, Spain), Khalid Hajji (CEOM, Belgium), Melanie Kamp (Zentrum Moderner Orient, Germany), Paolo Branca (Università Cattolica del S. Cuore, Italy), Redouane Abdellah (Islamic Cultural Center of Rome, Italy), Renata Peppiceli (LUISS university, Italy), Riem Spielhaus (Erlangen Centre for Islam & Law in Europe, Germany), Romain Sèze (Reims University, France), Sara Silvestri (City University London, UK), Stefano Allievi (University of Padova, Italy), Tuomas Martikainen (Åbo Akademi University, Finland), Valentina Gentile (LUISS University, Italy)

Organizing partners

The Department of Political Science and the School of Government at LUISS Guido Carli University of Rome,

The Department of Cross Cultural Studies at University of Copenhagen

John Cabot American University (JCU) of Rome

The NordForsk Research Network “Norms and Narratives in the Nordic Countries” (NONA),

The European Council of Moroccan Oulema (CEOM) in Brussels,

The Netherlands Interuniversity School for Islamic Studies (NISIS)

Conveners

Mohammed Hashas, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Department of Political Science, LUISS University of Rome.

Niels Valdemar Vinding, Assistant Professor, Department of Cross Cultural & Regional Studies, University of Copenhagen

Khalid Hajji, Secretary General of the European Council of Moroccan Oulema in Brussels, & associate professor at Mohamed I University in Oujda, Morocco.

Jan Jaap de Ruiter, Associate professor, Department of Cultural Studies, Tilburg University in the Netherlands.

Co-conveners

Tom Bailey, Adjunct Assistant Professor of Philosophy & Business Administration, JCU

Michael Driessen, Assistant Professor of Political Science & International Affairs, JCU

Contact

Attendance is open and free but registration is required for space management (please write to Mohammed Hashas, hashasmohammed, or Niels Valdemar Vinding, lbm993). A small amount of grants are available for doctoral students and postdoctoral researchers to help with accommodation. To apply for a grant, contact the conveners above.

N.B. The conference programme will be circulated in due time.

The Problem with Numbers in the Study of Religions

The Problem with Numbers in the Study of Religions Diskus Vol 16, No 2 (2014) Guest Editor: Bettina Schmidt

https://www.religiousstudiesproject.com/DISKUS/index.php/DISKUS/index

Table of Contents

Articles

The Problem with Numbers in Study of Religions: Introduction Bettina Schmidt

Denominations of Faith in the Census
Gunnar Thorvaldsen

Deepening Secularization? How to Read Official Statistics. A Case of the Czech Republic David Václavík

Religion, “Non-Religion” and Indigenous Peoples on the 2011 Australian National Census James L. Cox, Adam Possamai

Counting the converts: investigating change of religion in Scotland and estimating change of religion in England and Wales using data from Scotland’s Census 2001 M. A. Kevin Brice

Ticking “no religion”: A case study amongst “young nones”
Simeon Wallis

Religion, Ethnicity and National Origins: Exploring the Independence of Variables in a Superdiverse Neighbourhood Martin D. Stringer

Surveying an urban ‘umma islamiyya’ in Germany: numbers and issues relating to the religious self-identification Vladislav Serikov

Afterword: Some reflections on numbers in the study of religion David Voas _______________________________________________