Monthly Archives: July 2016

Journal Announcement: Special issue of New Diversities

The Infrastructures of Diversity: Materiality and Culture in Urban Space, ed. Marian Burchardt, Stefan Höhne and AbdouMaliq Simone

Out now: special issue of New Diversities

The Infrastructures of Diversity: Materiality and Culture in Urban Space

Guest Editors: Marian Burchardt (Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Göttingen), Stefan Höhne (Technische Universität Berlin) and AbdouMaliq Simone (Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Göttingen). With contributions by Suzi Hall, Kim Knott, AbdouMaliq Simone and many others.

In contemporary scholarship materiality and human diversity constitute two largely disconnected ways of think- ing about urban space. Scholars interested in materiality are loosely connected and inspired by the “infrastructural turn” while those focusing on human diversity work within the “diversity turn”. This special issue argues that bringing together urban infrastructures and urban diversity opens up new avenues for thinking about the politics and meanings of space. Spanning distances between Rio de Janeiro, London, Manila and Ankara, the contributions to this special issue ask how socio-material assemblages shape encounters with diversity in urban life in relation to concrete social problems.




LIST OF CONTENTS

The Infrastructures of Diversity: Materiality and Culture in Urban Space – An Introduction
by Marian Burchardt (Max PIanck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Göttingen) and Stefan Höhne (Technische Universität Berlin)
»read the full article

Walls and Other Unremarkable Boundaries in South London: Impenetrable Infrastructure or Portals of Time, Space and Cultural Difference?
by Kim Knott (Lancaster University)
»read the full article
Abstract and Keywords

Infrastructures of Partition, Infrastructures of Juncture: Separation Barriers and Intercommunal Contact in Belfast and Nicosia
by Emily Bereskin (Technische Universität Berlin)
»read the full article
Abstract and Keywords

Envisioning Migration: Drawing the Infrastructure of Stapleton Road, Bristol
by Suzanne M. Hall, Julia King, and Robin Finlay (London School of Economics and Political Science)
»read the full article
Abstract and Keywords

The Sacred Diesel: Infrastructures of Transportation and Religious Art in Manila
by Anderson Blanton (Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Göttingen)
»read the full article
Abstract and Keywords

Large-scale Urbanization and the Infrastructure of Religious Diversity in the Favelas of Rio de Janeiro
by Stephan Lanz (European University Viadrina, Frankfurt/Oder)
»read the full article
Abstract and Keywords

Architectures of Interreligious Tolerance: The Infrastructural Politics of Place and Space in Croatia and Turkey
by Jeremy F. Walton (Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Göttingen)
»read the full article
Abstract and Keywords

Urban Diversity: Disentangling the Cultural from the Economic Case
by Boris Vormann (John-F.-Kennedy Institute for North American Studies, Berlin)
»read the full article
Abstract and Keywords

Cities as Infrastructures of Diversification and Homogenisation: Constructing Multiformal Spaces in Paris and Shenzhen
by Stephen Read (Delft University of Technology)
»read the full article
Abstract and Keywords

Passing Things Along: (In)completing Infrastructure
by AbdouMaliq Simone (Max PIanck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Göttingen)
»read the full article
Abstract and Keywords

Permanent Qualitative Social Science Research Fellow Post

https://www.newman.ac.uk/jobs/4656/qualitative-social-science-research-fellow?1=m

REF: NU3216
Salary scale: £31, 656 - £35, 609 per annum
Closing date for applications: 09/08/2016

An exciting opportunity has arisen for a Research Fellow to work within the Centre for Science, Knowledge and Belief in Society (CSKBS) at Newman University. Up until September 2017 the post holder will work principally on the development of a large-scale project on ‘Establishing a framework for a multidisciplinary study of science in Muslim societies’. Beyond 2017 it is expected that the post holder will work on subsequent phase 2 grant delivery and contribute to the development of the ‘Science across diverse societies’ research theme within CSKBS.

‘Establishing a framework for a multidisciplinary study of science in Muslim societies’ phase 1 project overview: There is a significant gap in scholarly understanding of how Muslims living in majority and minority contexts perceive science and the role it plays in the construction of both their religious and secular worldviews. The primary aim of this planning project is to begin to build the capacity and networks necessary to conduct a larger scale research study to address this gap. This longer term research will seek to develop a more comprehensive picture of how differing groups along a spectrum of worldviews, within Muslim majority and minority contexts, relate to and form public domain narratives surrounding ‘science’ and ‘religion’.

The Centre for Science, Knowledge and Belief in Society (CSKBS) is a multidisciplinary Research Centre that fosters open-minded social science and humanities based research on: the public understanding and communication of the relationship between science and religion, research into the sociology and psychology of religion, and the role of science, knowledge and belief in diverse societies. For further details, please go to:

/research-centres/2371

This project will be undertaken in partnership with Dr. Salman Hameed at the Center for the Study of Science in Muslim Societies (SSiMS) at Hampshire College, US. For further details, please go to:

https://www.hampshire.edu/faculty/salman-hameed

Research Fellow candidates should expect to undertake and play a significant role in the development of the ‘Establishing a framework for a multidisciplinary study of science in Muslim societies’ project, and to contribute to project publications and the development of future research within the research CSKBS. Therefore, they are expected to have a relevant disciplinary background and an interest in/enthusiasm for the subject matter of the project and the Centre’s wider research.

We welcome applications from experienced, enthusiastic and creative early career researchers with backgrounds in:

  • science and technology studies
  • Sociology of religion/sociology of Islam
  • qualitative sociology
  • Human Geography
  • related areas of social scientific research

You will hold a relevant doctoral qualification. You will have a record of research activity commensurate with your career stage. It is essential of the post holder to have some experience working on postdoctoral qualitative research projects. Language skills in French, Arabic or Turkish are desirable but not essential. Where relevant mentoring and support will be provided.

The post is expected to start in September 2016.

Informal enquiries regarding the above post may be made with, Dr, Fern Elsdon-Baker, F.Elsdon-Baker@newman.ac.uk, 0121 476 1181 Ext 2415.

Further particulars can be obtained by emailing: recruitment@newman.ac.uk or telephone 0121 476 1181 ext 2398.

NCSR: Program updates

Program updates!

A warm welcome to Helsinki, dear Nordic Conference for the Sociology of Religion participants!The conference program has been updated. We have tried to optimize the number of papers per session to make the program as convienient as possible for both participants and presenters, and this had led to some some changes both in the schedule and in session construction. Please double check the time of your presentation from the conference web page!

For all early birds and social butterflies, we also hold a registration and reception event on Tuesday the 16th August at 19:00-21:00 in the Crypt of the Helsinki Cathedral, Kirkkokatu 18. This event is organized in collaboration with the Parish Union of Helsinki, and offers us the chance to meet and greet, to register for the conference and enjoy drinks and snacks together.

NCSR goes social!
Join your colleagues in social media! In Twitter use:
#NCSR2016
and join our Facebook event:
NCSR 2016
Organizing a meeting?
We have reserved two rooms for your internal meetings during the conference. If you wish to reserve a room please contact us, if you haven’t already done so!
You are all warmly welcome to take part in the conference! The registration in our web page is open until August 5th.
If you have any questions, amendments etc., please do not hesitate to contact us! We are mostly out of office during July (like we hope that you are!), but we do our best to reply to you.

Warm and happy summer days to you all, and see you in August!

Kati Tervo-Niemelä
Jenni Spännäri
and the whole organizing team

A New Issue: Sociology of Islam: Volume 4, Issue 3, 2016

Sociology of Islam

Volume 4, Issue 3, 2016

Editors Gary Wood, Virginia Tech and Tugrul Keskin, Maltepe University, Istanbul and Shanghai University

Reviews Editor Joshua Hendrick, Loyola University of Maryland

https://www.brill.com/publications/journals/sociology-islam

 Research Article
Islamic Reformism as Networks of Meaning
 Research Article
The “New Turkey”? Urban Renewal and Beyond
 Research Article
Cultural Opportunity and Social Movements
 Research Article
Post-Islamism or Veering Toward Political Modernity?
 Research Article
The Developing Relations between Turkey and China Since 2005
 Research Article
China’s Growing Role in the Middle East
 Book Review
Temptations of Power: Islamists and Illiberal Democracy in a New Middle East, written by Review of Shadi Hamid
 Book Review
Women and the Transmission of Religious Knowledge in Islam, written by, Asma Sayeed
 Book Review
Islam in Liberalism, written by Joseph A. Massad
 Book Review
Muslimism in Turkey and Beyond: Religion in the Modern World, written by Neslihan Cevik

Journal Announcement: Virtual Special Issue

We are pleased to introduce a brand new Virtual Special Issue from Journal of Contemporary Religion featuring key research on sociology and religion.

By exploring the crossroads between the two subject areas, this new Virtual Special Issue seeks to celebrate the interdisciplinary character of Journal of Contemporary Religion.

Join Elisabeth Arweck, Editor of JCR in a journey through the latest articles and reviews taking a sociological approach to contemporary issues regarding religion.

All research featured in this new Virtual Special Issue is free to access for a limited time, so simply click on the link below to start reading today.

Kind regards,
Alice Pape
Routledge Religion
www.tandfonline.com

Three collaborating research fellowships/postdocs at Uppsala University: “Religion & Migration”

Three collaborating research fellowships/postdocs on the theme “Religion and Migration: Challenges for Society, Law and Democracy”

  • Time period January 1st 2017 – May 31st 2018 (17 months)
  • 75% of full-time working time   

The research fellowships will be part of the multidisciplinary research programme The Impact of Religion: Challenges for Society, Law and Democracy (IMPACT) at Uppsala Religion and Society Research Centre (CRS), Uppsala University. Last application date September 15th 2016. For further details and full announcement see:

https://www.uu.se/en/about-uu/join-us/details/?positionId=108367

CFP Deadline Extended: Open Theology - Alternative Religiosities

Dear colleagues,

for those who have been planning submission of their works for the topical issue of Open Theology journal:

Editors have received requests regarding possible extension of the deadline for the article submission, so it has been decided on the updated official deadline - July 20.

Best,

Dr. Rasa Pranskevičiūtė

Vytautas Magnus University

CALL FOR PAPERS

for the topical issue of Open Theology journal

Alternative Religiosities in the Soviet Union and the Communist East-Central Europe:

Formations, Resistances and Manifestations

Open Theology (https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/opth) invites submissions for the topical issue “Alternative Religiosities in the Soviet Union and the Communist East-Central Europe: Formations, Resistances and Manifestations”, under the general editorship of Dr. Rasa Pranskevičiūtė and Dr. Eglė Aleknaitė (Vytautas Magnus University).
DESCRIPTION

After the boom of traditional religions (i. e. prevailing national religions or those that have a relatively long history in a particular country) and alternative religious movements (i. e. religious movements that offer an alternative to the traditional religion(s) in a particular country) in post-communist/post-socialist countries, the religion(s) of this area have gained increasing scholarly attention. Research on the religious situation during the prior communist/socialist period is primarily focused on restrictions placed on traditional religions and their survival strategies, while the corresponding phenomena of the alternative religious of that time still lack proper analysis.

The special issue invites papers that address alternative religiosities in the communist/socialist countries up to 1990. Due to Soviet control, they mostly existed underground and could remain only if expressed clandestinely. Beside the officially-established Soviet culture, connected with the Communist Party’s aim to control all aspects of the public sphere, there was an unofficial cultural field that was very receptive to the arrival, formation, spread and expressions of diverse alternative religiosities and spiritualities. The disappointment with the existing narrowness of the official communist ideology and the loss of the absolute allegiance to it led to the formation and rise of unofficial socio-cultural alternatives within the system. The underground activities, including access to alternative spiritual and esoteric ideas and practices, generally existed in parallel, or even jointly, with the official culture and institutions.

We invite religious scholars, historians, anthropologists, as well as authors representing other disciplines, to submit both empirical and theoretical papers including, but not limited to the following topics:

Networks and inter-community connections

Flows of ideas within the Soviet Union and communist East-Central Europe and from the outside

Centers and peripheries of the milieu of alternative religiosity in the region

Politics and actions of the regime towards alternative religiosity

Restrictions, repressions and survival strategies of practitioners of alternative religiosity

Milieu of alternative religiosity as a space of resistance

Relationships of communities of alternative religiosity with dominant religious traditions

Theoretical frameworks and methodological problems in research on alternative religiosities within the Soviet Union and the communist East-Central European region

Authors publishing their articles in the special issue will benefit from:

· transparent, comprehensive and fast peer review

· efficient route to fast-track publication and full advantage of De Gruyter Open’s e-technology,

· no publication fees,

· free language assistance for authors from non-English speaking regions.

HOW TO SUBMIT

Submissions are due July 20, 2016. To submit an article for the special issue of Open Theology, authors are asked to access the on-line submission system at: https://www.editorialmanager.com/openth/

Please choose as article type: “Special Issue Article: Alternative Religiosities”.

Before submission the authors should carefully read over the Instruction for Authors, available at: https://www.degruyter.com/view/supplement/s23006579_Instruction_for_Authors.pdf

All contributions will undergo critical review before being accepted for publication.

Further questions about this thematic issue can be addressed to Dr. Rasa Pranskevičiūtė at Rasa.Pranskeviciute@degruyteropen.com or Dr. Eglė Aleknaitė at ealeknaite@yahoo.com. In case of technical questions, please contact journal Managing Editor Dr. Katarzyna Tempczyk at katarzyna.tempczyk@degruyteropen.com

Call for Topical Issues: Open Theology vol. 2017

Call for proposals

for upcoming TOPICAL ISSUES

in the Open Theology journal vol. 2017

Open Theology journal (https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/opth) invites groups of researchers, conference organizers etc. to submit their proposals of edited volumes to be considered as topical issues for vol. 2017.

Open Theology is an international Open Access, peer-reviewed academic journal that welcomes contributions addressing religion in its various forms and aspects: historical, theological, sociological, psychological, and other. The journal encompasses all major disciplines of Theology and Religious Studies, presenting doctrine, history, organization and everyday life of various types of religious groups and the relations between them. We publish articles from the field of Theology as well as Philosophy, Sociology and Psychology of Religion, and also dialogue between Religion and Science.

 

 

Our past topical issues included:

2015:

  • Violence of Non-Violence (ed. Michael Jerryson and Margo Kitts)
  • Manichaeism - New Historical and Philological Studies (ed. John C. Reeves)

  • In Search of a Contemporary World View: Contrasting Thomistic and Whiteheadian Approaches (ed. Joseph Bracken)

  • Science and/or Religion: a 21st Century Debate (ed. Shiva Khalili and Fraser Watts)

2016:

  • Cognitive Science of Religion (ed. Jason Marsh)
  • Is Transreligious Theology Possible? (ed. Jerry L. Martin)

  •  

    All are available, free access, at: https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/opth

     

    Uncoming titles (2016):

    • Is Transreligious Theology Possible? (ed. Jerry L. Martin)
  • Psychotherapy and Religious Values (ed. P. Scott Richards)

  • Bible Translation (ed. Mark L. Strauss)

  • Religious Recognition (ed. Heikki Koskinen, Ritva Palmen and Risto Saarinen)

  •  

    HOW TO SUBMIT

    Proposals may be submitted by completing the Topical Issue Proposal Form available at https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/opth and forwarding them to Managing Editor Dr. Katarzyna Tempczyk at katarzyna.tempczyk@degruyteropen.com.

    Proposals received by 31 October 2016 may qualify for special publication offers.

    For futher details, please contact Dr. Katarzyna Tempczyk at katarzyna.tempczyk@degruyteropen.com.

    Book Announcement: Family Law in Syria

    Dear Colleagues,

    I am delighted to announce that my book Family Law in Syria. Patriarchy, Pluralism and Personal Status Laws is now out with I.B. Tauris (London, UK).

    ABOUT THE BOOK

    The current Syrian crisis has its roots in the sectarian nature of the country’s multi-religious society. Since Ottoman times, the different religious communities have enjoyed the right to regulate and administer their own family relations. Matters of personal status including marriage, divorce, child custody and inheritance continue to be managed by a variety of religious laws and courts operating simultaneously within the legal system of the state. However, this complex system of competing jurisdictions has also affected inter-communal relations and has been used to deepen communal divides. Esther van Eijk discusses socio-legal practices in Syria by focusing on three courts: a shar‘iyya, a Catholic court and a Greek-Orthodox court. While the plurality of Syrian family law is clear, she shows how - irrespective of religious affiliation - it is nevertheless characterised by the prevalence of shared cultural or patriarchal views and norms on marital relations, family and gender. Based on extensive fieldwork, Family Law in Syria offers a detailed analysis of a country that has in recent years been inaccessible to researchers. The book is a vital contribution to the growing literature on personal status laws in the Middle East and sheds light on the historical, socio-political and religious complexities and fault-lines that mark contemporary Syria.

    REVIEWS
    ‘This book is a significant addition to the literature on contemporary family law in the Middle East, with valuable research material on Syrian law and court practice presented within the frames of emerging scholarly themes.’ – Lynn Welchman, Professor of law, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS)

    ‘This is an excellent piece of work in a poorly researched topic. Indeed, while the personal status of Muslims attracted much attention, family law of non-Muslim communities in Muslim-majority societies was neglected. However, [van Eijk’s] study provides a wonderful entry into the legal and social evolutions of contemporary multi-confessional societies in which co-existence and tolerance became especially problematic recently.’ - Baudouin Dupret, Associate Professor for Law, Political Science and Anthropology at University of Leiden, Netherlands

    For more information see: https://www.ibtauris.com/Books/Law/Jurisprudence%20%20general%20issues/Law%20%20society/Family%20Law%20in%20Syria%20Patriarchy%20Pluralism%20and%20Personal%20Status%20Codes.aspx?menuitem={FE151E5B-2A65-4E60-9F5A-6671400BE59B}

    When you order online go to www.ibtauris.com and enter the discount code (see attached flyer) when prompted (for individuals only), which will give you a 30% discount (Special Offer Price £48.30).

    Esther van Eijk