Global Religious Movements Across Borders: Sacred Service Edited by Stephen M. Cherry and Helen Rose Ebaugh Ashgate, 2014
Series : Ashgate Inform Series on Minority Religions and Spiritual Movements
https://www.ashgate.com/isbn/9781409456872
From global missionizing among proselytic faiths to mass migration through religious diasporas, religion has traveled from one side of the world and back again. It continues to play a prominent role in shaping world politics and has been a vital force in the continued emergence, spread, and creation of a transnational civil society.
Exploring how religious roots are shaping organizations that seek to aid people across political and geographic boundaries - ‘service movements’
- this book focuses on how religious movements establish structures to assist people with basic human needs such as food, clothing, shelter, education, and health. Examining a multitude of faith traditions with origins in different parts of the world, seven contributing chapters, with an introduction and conclusions by the senior author, offer a unique discussion of the intersections between religious transnationalism and social movements.
Contents:
Preface, Helen Rose Ebaugh
Introduction to religious and global transnational service movements, Stephen M. Cherry
The Redeemed Christian Church of God: African Pentecostalism, Afe Adogame
The Gulen Movement: Sunni Islam, Helen Rose Ebaugh
Soka Gakkai International: Nichiren Japanese Buddhism, Daniel A. Métraux
BAPS Swaminarayan Community: Hinduism, Arun Brahmbhatt
The Gawad Kalinga Movement: charismatic Catholicism, Stephen M. Cherry
Aga Khan development network: Shia Ismaili Islam, Karim H. Karim
Bahá’à international community: Bahá’à faith, Mike McMullen
Studying global transnational religious service movements, Stephen M. Cherry
Index.
About the Editors:
Stephen M. Cherry, Ph.D is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Houston Clear Lake. His research interests include immigration, religion, Asian Americans, and civic life with a particular focus on Filipino-American Catholics post 1965. Stephen has published articles in various general sociology and sociology of religion journals including his most recent works in the special issue of Sociological Spectrum (2009) and the special issue of Journal of Criminological Studies (2012). In 2006 he received the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion Distinguished Article Award.
Helen Rose Ebaugh, professor, University of Houston, received her Ph.D.
in Sociology from Columbia University in 1975 with specialties in organizational Sociology and the Sociology of Religion. In addition to five books, she has published numerous articles in scholarly journals, including American Sociological Review, Social Forces, the Journal of Non-Profit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, Sociological Analysis and the Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. She served as president of the national Association for the Sociology of Religion, helped organize and served as the first chair of the American Sociological Association’s Section on the Sociology of Religion and is past president of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion. Ebaugh received two consecutive research grants from the Pew Charitable Trusts to study religion and the new immigrants in the United States. The results from the first grant that focused on the role of religious congregations in the incorporation of new immigrants is described in Religion and the New
Immigrants: Adaptations and Continuities in New Immigrant Congregations (AltaMira Press, 2000). The second book from the project, Religion Across Borders: Transnational Religious Networks (AltaMira Press,s 2002) is an analysis of the impact of religious ties among immigrants in the United States and family/friends in their home countries. With a major grant from the Lilly Endowment, Ebaugh studied inter-faith coalitions and their provision of social services. She routinely teaches graduate and undergraduate courses in the Sociology of Religion and the study of World Religions.