Call for Application – UCSIA Summer School “Culture, Religion and Society”

(26 August – 2 September 2012, Antwerp, Belgium)‏

We would like to draw your attention to the call for applications for the 2012 UCSIA summer school on “Religion, Culture and Society”. This summer school is a one-week course taking place from Sunday 26 August until Sunday 2 September (dates of arrival and departure). This year the programme will focus on the topic of Secularism(s) and Religion in Society.

Topic:

It is evident that religion, culture and society are strongly interwoven and are crucial for understanding the contemporary world. With globalization touching all aspects of our lives, religion(s) and culture(s) have to understand their position in this complex globalizing process. It is the aim of the interdisciplinary UCSIA summer school to better understand the dynamic interplay between the macro- and micro-social developments concerning religion that take place in much of the contemporary world.

Guest lecturers are Rajeev Bhargava (Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, Delhi), Peggy Levitt (Wellesley College), Robert W. Hefner (Boston University) and John Hutchinson (London School of Economics).

Practical details:

Participation and stay for young scholars and researchers are free of charge. Participants should pay for their own travel expenses to Antwerp.

You can submit your application via the electronic submission on the summer school website. The completed file as well as all other required application documents must be submitted to the UCSIA Selection Committee not later than Sunday 15 April 2012.

For further information regarding the programme and application procedure, please have a look at their website.

Please help us to distribute this call for application among PhD students and postdoctoral scholars who might be interested in applying for this summer school.

For all further information, do not hesitate to contact UCSIA on the address below.

Sara Mels

Project coordinator

UCSIA vzw

Prinsstraat 14

B-2000 Antwerp

Belgium

Tel. +32 (0)3 265 45 99

Fax +32 (0)3 707 09 31

e-mail: sara.mels@ua.ac.be

CFP for special issue on ‘Gender, Religion and Migration’ in new e-journal Religion and Gender

Perhaps there might be some interest for applications which include a persective on secularism and nonreligion in this special issue of Gender, Religion and Migration.

The special issue on Gender, Religion and Migration will look at the intersectional dimension of gender, ethnicity and religion where religion in particular plays a central role in providing a sense of belonging for migrants and represents a source of identification during the migratory experience. The special issue will focus on the ways in which gender roles are constructed and reproduced through religion within migrant communities in urban contexts and brings together leading scholars in the field of migration to explore how geographical mobility shapes gendered religious identities. For too long social sciences and migration studies have paid insufficient attention to the importance of religion in the everyday lives of many migrants and Levitt’s (2008) call for more ‘empirical, grounded’ research on migration and religion aims at filling this particular gap in the literature .

Mobilizing religion may serve a range of diverse purposes during the migratory experience and, indeed, migration may in turn shape the different ways in which religion is reproduced on an every day basis if compared with the country of origin of the worshippers. Religion can also provide a trans-national source of identification; for example, it may play a significant role in enabling migrants to imagine themselves within collectivities that span beyond the nation-state. In other words, religious worship may fulfil many functions for migrants, not only spiritual, but also material and social such as civic participation and commitment towards the parish for church goers (Levitt 2008). Hence, for migrants in particular, religion can potentially provide a means for both maintaining and expressing continuity of faith and practice while negotiating integration within a new environment (Stanczak, 2006).

The special issue On Gender, Religion and Migration will build on the symposium at Middlesex University, held in 2011, to explore comparisons and contrasts across different religious communities which could include for example, Muslim, Christian, Jewish and Hindi, etc.

This collection of articles aims to bring together empirical research from different academic disciplines, including sociology, geography and anthropology and using a range of methods to engage with and research different religious communities. We welcome papers that present a comparative approach to studying religion in migration.

In particular, we are looking for papers that tackle the following:

• Comparisons across religious groups

• Intersectional dimensions of gender, ethnicity and religion

• Construction of gender through religion in urban contexts

• Religion as a trans-national source of identification and the role of gender in negotiating local integration through religion

• Religion as a source of civic engagement differently negotiated in migrant women and men

• Role of religious organizations in providing integration opportunities while ensuring continuity of social practices with the country of origins for migrant women and man

• Role of religion in the intergenerational negotiation of belonging in the host country and outcomes in challenging traditional gender roles

If you are interested please send a 200 word abstract, along with a short biographical note, to Dr. Ryan and Dr Vacchelli at the addresses below by Monday 27 February

Please note that if your abstract is accepted, full papers will be needed by June 2012.

Dr. Louise Ryan and Dr. Elena Vacchelli, Middlesex University,

Contact: l.ryan@mdx.ac.uk and e.vacchelli@mdx.ac.uk

Call for Papers for special issue on ‘Gender, Religion and Migration’ in new e-journal Religion and Gender http://www.religionandgender.org
 
The special issue on Gender, Religion and Migration will look at the intersectional dimension of gender, ethnicity and religion where religion in particular plays a central role in providing a sense of belonging for migrants and represents a source of identification during the migratory experience. The special issue will focus on the ways in which gender roles are constructed and reproduced through religion within migrant communities in urban contexts and brings together leading scholars in the field of migration to explore how geographical mobility shapes gendered religious identities. For too long social sciences and migration studies have paid insufficient attention to the importance of religion in the everyday lives of many migrants and Levitt’s (2008) call for more ‘empirical, grounded’ research on migration and religion aims at filling this particular gap in the literature . 
Mobilizing religion may serve a range of diverse purposes during the migratory experience and, indeed, migration may in turn shape the different ways in which religion is reproduced on an every day basis if compared with the country of origin of the worshippers.  Religion can also provide a trans-national source of identification; for example, it may play a significant role in enabling migrants to imagine themselves within collectivities that span beyond the nation-state.  In other words, religious worship may fulfil many functions for migrants, not only spiritual, but also material and social such as civic participation and commitment towards the parish for church goers (Levitt 2008). Hence, for migrants in particular, religion can potentially provide a means for both maintaining and expressing continuity of faith and practice while negotiating integration within a new environment (Stanczak, 2006).
The special issue On Gender, Religion and Migration will build on the symposium at Middlesex University, held in 2011, to explore comparisons and contrasts across different religious communities which could include for example, Muslim, Christian, Jewish and Hindi, etc. 
This collection of articles aims to bring together empirical research from different academic disciplines, including sociology, geography and anthropology and using a range of methods to engage with and research different religious communities. We welcome papers that present a comparative approach to studying religion in migration.
 
In particular, we are looking for papers that tackle the following: 
 
•	Comparisons across religious groups
•	Intersectional dimensions of gender, ethnicity and religion 
•	Construction of gender through religion in urban contexts
•	Religion as a trans-national source of identification and the role of gender in negotiating local integration through religion 
•	Religion as a source of civic engagement differently negotiated in migrant women and men
•	Role of religious organizations in providing integration opportunities while ensuring continuity of social practices with the country of origins for migrant women and man
•	Role of religion in the intergenerational negotiation of belonging in the host country  and outcomes in challenging traditional gender roles
 
If you are interested please send a 200 word abstract, along with a short biographical note, to Dr. Ryan and Dr Vacchelli at the addresses below by Monday 27 February:
 
Please note that if your abstract is accepted, full papers will be needed by June 2012.
Dr. Louise Ryan and Dr. Elena Vacchelli, Middlesex University,
Contact: l.ryan@mdx.ac.uk and e.vacchelli@mdx.ac.uk

Call for Book Proposals: Religion, Education and Values

Series Editors:

Dr Stephen Parker

The Rev’d Canon Professor Leslie J. Francis

Dr Rob Freathy

Dr Mandy Robbins

Debates about religion, education and values are more central to contemporary society than ever before. The challenges posed by the interaction between these different spheres will continue to increase as the effects of globalization and cultural pluralization impact on educational settings. Our radically changed and rapidly changing environment poses critical questions about how we should educate individuals to live in increasingly diverse societies.

Books in this series offer the most recent research, from a variety of disciplinary perspectives, on the interface between religion, education and values around the world. The series covers such themes as the history of religious education, the philosophies and psychologies of religious and values education, and the application of social science research methods to the study of young people’s values and world-views.

Books within the series are subject to peer review and include single and co-authored monographs and edited collections. For more information, please contact Christabel Scaife, Commissioning Editor, Peter Lang Ltd, c.scaife@peterlang.com.

CFP: New Forms of Public Religion 5th to 7th September 2012

AHRC/ESRC RELIGION AND SOCIETY PROGRAMME

5th to 7th September 2012

The Divinity School, St John’s College, Cambridge, CB2 1TW

Call for Papers

The fact that religion has not privatised, but remains an important aspect of public life, is now well recognised. But talk of ‘public religion’ can be vague and unfocused. The aim of this conference is to explore – with new findings – the forms which public religion is taking today, not only in the West, but elsewhere in an increasingly connected world.

The conference streams indicate the main arenas in relation to which public religion will be discussed, and on which papers are invited.

Additional suggestions are also welcome:

  • The Market and Religion
  • Politics and Religion
  • Law and Religion
  • Religion, Media and Civil Society
  • Violence (State and Non-state) and Religion
  • Religion in Public Places and Spaces
  • Religion, Health and Welfare
  • Religion and Education
  • Religion and Migration

Speakers include:

Lori Beaman

José Casanova

The Rt Hon Charles Clarke

Grace Davie

Pamela Dickey-Young

Stewart Hoover

The Rt Revd Graham James

Meredith McGuire

Nancy Nason-Clark

Jim Spickard

Linda Woodhead

The conference will showcase thirty or so projects funded by the Religion and Society Programme which have new findings in this area. These will be supplemented by the papers received through this open call.

Individual paper proposals (max. 200 words) should be submitted to:

Peta Ainsworth: p.ainsworth@lancaster.ac.uk by 30th April 2012.

The conference is subsidised by the sponsors and costs £100 per delegate, £50 for postgraduates/unwaged (for the entire conference) or £50 per day, £25 for postgraduates/unwaged. The conference fee excludes accommodation and evening meals. For further details and registration go to:

http://www.religionandsociety.org.uk/events/programme_events/show/new_forms_of_public_religion

A limited number of bursaries are available for postgraduates in the UK who need to travel some distance to Cambridge. Please send an email with your registration form to Peta Ainsworth stating in one paragraph why you require assistance and how much your travel costs will be.

www.religionandsociety.org.uk

CFP Association for the Sociology of Religion, Denver, Colorado 12-18August

2012 Annual Meeting

August 17-18 – Denver, Colorado

Religion and Social Change

Papers and discussion sessions on all themes within the sociology of religion are welcome, but especially those related to the meeting theme, including, but not limited to, the following: Religion is both an agent and a product of social change. Closely linked to many historical and global transformations, religion has served as both an opiate and an amphetamine for change. Indeed, most religious 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; 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. We want to explore this complex relationship between religion and social change. To what extent do the characteristics of religious groups and their members determine the manner in which they attempt to enact change? Do religious groups have special advantages or disadvantages in their ability to foster social change as compared to secular groups and institutions? How do larger social changes influence the religious beliefs and actions of individuals and institutions?

Papers and discussion sessions on all themes within the sociology of religion are welcome, but especially those related to the meeting theme, including, but not limited to, the following:

  • religion and politics
  • religion and gender
  • religion and racial harmony
  • religion and science
  • religion and volunteering
  • religion and morality issues
  • religion and extremist behavior
  • utopian and millenarian movements in religion
  • religious charitable organizations
  • religious conversion, religious experiences and personal transformation
  • theoretical perspectives regarding religion and engagement with society

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 amaximum of 100 words. (3) 2012 membership in ASR is required for program consideration (one author, for multi-authored papers). Do not submit proposals prior to 1 January. PROGRAM CHAIR: Christopher Bader, Chapman University.

RALPH A. GALLAGHER TRAVEL GRANT

ASR makes available a limited number of travel assistance grants for members who are presenting papers at its annual meeting. These fall into two categories: student grants and grants for foreign scholars living outside of North America. Grants for students range up to $500.

Foreign scholar grants are subdivided between those living or working in ISA Category A or B countries and those living or working in ISA Category C countries. (The ISA geopolitical category scheme may be accessed at http://www.isa-sociology.org/form_isa.pdf. Note that ISA

membership is NOT required for consideration. ASR simply uses its scheme as the most universally recognized basis within the profession.) Grants for those in Category A and B countries are limited to $500. Grants for those in Category C countries may range up to $1,000. In no case will anyone receive a grant in excess of $1,000.

Applications should take the form of a letter submitted to the program chair along with the applicant’s program paper proposal. Applicants should state both the amount of their request to ASR and also indicate how they will fund that portion of their trip not funded by the

Gallagher Grant. It is acceptable to state that the remainder will come from the applicant’s personal funds. Applicants should understand that these grants are competitive and that the total amount of grants awarded seldom exceeds $5,000.

One-quarter of the grants may made by the Program Chair on his or her own initiative. The remainder of domestic Student awards are also made by the Program Chair based on applications. International award applications are vetted by the International Committee, to whom they are forwarded by the Program Chair. For 2012, the International Committee is composed of Prema Kurien (chair), Giuseppe Giordan, and Afe Adogame.


TONIGHT: Religious Identity In ‘Superdiverse’ Societies, 8th February 2012 LAST CHANCE TO REGISTER

WESTMINSTER FAITH DEBATES

The first Faith Debate Religious Identity in ‘Superdiverse’ Societies is tonight, Wednesday, 8th February 2012 at RUSI, 61 Whitehall, London, SW1A 2ET. A few places are still available and if you would like to register, please email relsocpr@lists.lancs.ac.uk

The academic papers for the debate are now available to download: http://www.religionandsociety.org.uk/faith_debates/identity and speaker Professor Kim Knott has a piece on it in this week’s Tablet (http://www.thetablet.co.uk/).

The Faith in Schools debate on 22nd February is oversubscribed, but places are still available to register for the rest of the series, see website for more information: http://www.religionandsociety.org.uk/faith_debates

CFP New Forms of Public Religion deadline for abstracts 30th April 2012.

New Forms of Public Religion

AHRC/ESRC RELIGION AND SOCIETY PROGRAMME

5th to 7th September 2012

The Divinity School, St John’s College, Cambridge, CB2 1TW

Call for Papers

The fact that religion has not privatised, but remains an important aspect of public life, is now well recognised.  But talk of ‘public religion’ can be vague and unfocused. The aim of this conference is to explore – with new findings – the forms which public religion is taking today, not only in the West, but elsewhere in an increasingly connected world.

The conference streams indicate the main arenas in relation to which public religion will be discussed, and on which papers are invited. Additional suggestions are also welcome:

  • The Market and Religion
  • Politics and Religion
  • Law and Religion
  • Religion, Media and Civil Society
  • Violence (State and Non-state) and Religion
  • Religion in Public Places and Spaces
  • Religion, Health and Welfare
  • Religion and Education
  • Religion and Migration

Speakers include:

Lori Beaman

José Casanova

The Rt Hon Charles Clarke

Grace Davie

Pamela Dickey-Young

Stewart Hoover

The Rt Revd Graham James

Meredith McGuire

Nancy Nason-Clark

Jim Spickard

Linda Woodhead

The conference will showcase thirty or so projects funded by the Religion and Society Programme which have new findings in this area. These will be supplemented by the papers received through this open call.

Individual paper proposals (max. 200 words) should be submitted to:  Peta Ainsworth:  p.ainsworth@lancaster.ac.uk by 30th April 2012.

The conference is subsidised by the sponsors and costs £100 per delegate, £50 for postgraduates/unwaged (for the entire conference) or £50 per day, £25 for postgraduates/unwaged.  The conference fee excludes accommodation and evening meals.  For further details and registration go to:http://www.religionandsociety.org.uk/events/programme_events/show/new_forms_of_public_religion

A limited number of bursaries are available for postgraduates in the UK who need to travel some distance to Cambridge.  Please send an email with your registration form to Peta Ainsworth stating in one paragraph why you require assistance and how much your travel costs will be.

Peta Ainsworth (Administrator)

AHRC/ESRC Religion & Society Programme

FASS Building

Lancaster University

Lancaster  LA1 4YN

Tel. (01524) 510826

www.religionandsociety.org.uk

CFP for International Conference on Mormonism in collaboration with European Observatory of Religions and Secularism

Please see below for details of the conference, for further information please contact bcellard@numericable.fr

International Conference on Mormonism: The evolution of Mormonism from sect to Church and from Church to sects

Université de Bordeaux 3

6 et 7 décembre 2012

Maison des Sciences de l’Homme d’Aquitaine

Organized par Bernadette RIGAL-CELLARD with the Master Religions et
Sociétés and CLIMAS (EA 4196), Université Michel de Montaigne Bordeaux 3

In collaboration with:

Carter CHARLES, CLIMAS (Cultures et littératures des mondes anglophones)

Régis DERICQUEBOURG (CNRS : sociétés, religions, laïcités, UMR 85-82,
axe religions en ultramodernité

The European Observatory of Religions and Secularism

Call for papers

The 2012 Mormonism conference is the sequel to the first French conference on Mormonism (Bordeaux  2009). It will address the issues arising from its institutional evolution.

The currently admitted typology of religious groups includes, sketchily, the cult, the sect, the denomination, the Church, the movement. All groups will not necessarily move from one level to the next and a number of them may stagnate, willingly or not, or simply disappear. It is the prophetic and organizational qualities of the founder(s) and of the successors that dictate the evolution of the group as much as the social and political surroundings.

Mormonism is one of the most interesting religions to study in this regard for, since its birth in 1830, it has operated constant changes that led its major institution, the Church of Jesus-Christ of Latter Day Saints, to move from the status of “sect”—in the sense of a group separating itself from a major tradition to follow a radical prophet—to
that of denomination, and then to reach the crowning status of Church,
at least in its native land.

If the general history of Mormonism is relatively well documented, it is not the case concerning all the steps it has climbed in less than two centuries, when most of its competitors, born in the same conditions, have not succeeded as well. How has Mormonism gone from the complete separatism of its early decades to an almost complete acceptance at home and in several foreign countries?

The conference will examine:

– the status of the main institution, the Salt Lake City Church of Jesus-Christ of Latter Day Saints: if the Church type is defined notably by its great inclusivism, a rather liberal discipline, membership mostly through birth into the religion, how can we reconcile the exclusivism, strict discipline, and dependence on proselytism…, of Mormonism with such status? Has Mormonism only reached the denomination level?

– the charismatic and organizational strategies implemented by the founding prophet, Joseph Smith, his immediate successor, the organizer prophet Brigham Young, and the following prophets and presidents in
order to bolster membership and obtain official recognition;

– the agents of interaction with the surrounding society and government in the USA; the management of idiosyncrasies: are they blurred or emphasized?

– the modifications of doctrine and/or of rituals to obtain recognition,

– the function played by lobbies and by the media (national or controlled by the group) to boost the  normalization of the relationships between the group and the outside.

The beginning of 2012 showing the strength of Mitt Romney’s candidacy for the Republican nomination:

– what strategies does his team rely on to transform his Mormonism into a positive force?

– what impact could his candidacy exert on the relationships between Church and State, religion and politics in the USA?

Moreover, it is obvious that if the changes undergone by Mormonism are mostly visible in its home nation, they also play out in its international branches. The conference will thus address the issue of its status outside the USA:

– the evolving conditions of its recognition by foreign societies and governments;

– public relations and lobbies abroad.

Finally, since in the process of denominationalization, of institutionalization, a heretofore sectarian group can  no longer appeal to those who chose it (or would choose it) for its original fire, it falls prey to inner schisms. Mormonism, in fact, did not have to wait for this process to unfold as it begot dissidence in its first decades
already (Reorganized Church now Community of Christ as one among several…). The conference will look into the roots of these past and current schisms (such as the Fundamentalist Latter Day Saints) and into
their consequences:

– are they the result of mere internal power struggles?

– what role do doctrinal and ritual alterations play?

– do these groups maintain institutional and human relations with the
Church in Salt Lake?

– does their mere existence exert  pressure,  directly or indirectly, on this institution and force it to evolve, and if so, how does it work?

– what relationships do the schismatic groups entertain among themselves?

– what evolutions have they undergone in the past, and what evolutions
can we predict for them?

Send a 20 line abstract and a short biography before September 15th, 2012 to: bcellard@numericable.fr

No funding can be granted to participants

 

“L’évolution du mormonisme de la secte à l’Église, de l’Église aux sectes”

Université de Bordeaux 3

 6 et 7 décembre 2012

Maison des Sciences de l’Homme d’Aquitaine

 Colloque international organisé par Bernadette RIGAL-CELLARD en partenariat avec le Master Religions et Sociétés et l’Équipe d’accueil CLIMAS (EA 4196) de l’Université Michel de Montaigne Bordeaux 3

En collaboration avec :

Carter CHARLES, CLIMAS (Cultures et Littératures des Mondes Anglophones)

Régis DERICQUEBOURG (CNRS : sociétés, religions, laïcités, UMR 85-82)

L’Observatoire européen des religions et de la laïcité

Appel à communications :

Faisant suite au premier colloque universitaire en France sur le mormonisme que nous avions organisé en décembre 2009 et qui abordait son rapport aux sociétés et aux États, celui-ci interroge les modalités de son évolution institutionnelle.

La typologie des groupes religieux actuellement reconnue inclut, schématiquement, le culte, la secte, la dénomination, l’Église, le mouvement. Tous ne vont pas forcément passer de l’un à l’autre, un certain nombre pouvant stagner, volontairement ou non, à chacun de ces niveaux, ou disparaître. C’est la qualité prophétique et organisationnelle du/des fondateur/s et des successeur/s qui dicte l’évolution ou non du dit groupe tout autant que le climat social et politique extérieur. Le mormonisme constitue une des religions les plus intéressantes à étudier dans ce cadre car depuis sa naissance en 1830 il opère des mutations constantes qui ont fait passer son institution principale, l’Église de Jésus-Christ des saints des derniers jours, du statut de « secte », au sens de groupe se détachant d’une tradition majeure pour suivre un prophète radical, à celui de « dénomination », pour atteindre, dans son pays au moins, le couronnement de celui d’« Église ».

Si l’histoire générale du mormonisme est relativement bien documentée, ce n’est pas le cas de toutes ces subtiles étapes qu’il a franchies en moins de deux siècles, étapes que la plupart de ses concurrents nés dans les mêmes conditions n’ont jamais pu dépasser. Comment a-t-il progressé de la séparation la plus absolue dans ses débuts à l’inclusion quasi aboutie en 2012 dans son pays d’origine et dans plusieurs autres pays, et au chiffre d’environ quatorze millions de baptisés dans le monde aujourd’hui ?

Les participants se concentreront sur :

– l’examen du statut d’Église de son institution principale : en effet si le type Église se définit notamment par un grand inclusivisme, une discipline libérale, une appartenance essentiellement par naissance…, comment concilier l’exclusivisme, la discipline stricte, la dépendance sur le prosélytisme…, du mormonisme avec le dit statut, ou alors ne relèverait-il encore que du type dénomination ?

– les stratégies charismatiques et organisationnelles déployées par le prophète fondateur, Joseph Smith, son successeur immédiat le prophète organisateur Brigham Young, et les prophètes présidents suivants afin d’élargir le noyau initial de disciples et obtenir la reconnaissance statutaire ;

– les agents de l’interaction avec la société environnante et le gouvernement aux États-Unis ; la gestion des idiosyncrasies : s’agit-il de les minorer, de les maximiser ?

– les modifications de la doctrine et/ou des rituels pour obtenir la reconnaissance ;

– la participation des médias nationaux et des médias contrôlés par le groupe à l’opération de normalisation des rapports groupe religieux/extérieur.

Le début de 2012 démontrant la solidité de la candidature de Mitt Romney à la nomination républicaine :

– quelles stratégies son équipe utilise-t-elle pour transformer son mormonisme en atout et non en handicap ?

– Quel impact sa candidature peut-elle avoir sur les rapports entre Église et État, religion et politique aux États-Unis ?

En outre, il est bien évident que si les mutations du mormonisme s’élaborent essentiellement aux États-Unis, elles se manifestent également dans ses implantations internationales. On interrogera alors le statut dont il relève en dehors de son pays d’origine :

– les modalités évolutives de la reconnaissance ou non du mormonisme par les sociétés et les gouvernements étrangers ;

– les activités de relations publiques, médiatiques, à l’étranger…

Enfin, dès lors qu’un mouvement naguère minoritaire s’institutionnalise, il ne peut plus satisfaire tous ceux qui l’avaient (ou l’auraient) choisi pour son feu originel, et il s’expose par conséquent à de nouvelles ruptures. Le mormonisme n’a pas attendu la reconnaissance extérieure pour être sillonné de courants schismatiques puisqu’il les a suscités dès ses premières décennies (Église réorganisée, maintenant Communauté du Christ, entre autres…). Les participants examineront les mobiles exacts de ces scissions passées et actuelles (les divers mouvements fondamentalistes par exemple), et l’impact de celles-ci :

– sont-elles le résultat de simples luttes internes pour le pouvoir ?

– quel rôle jouent les modifications doctrinales et rituelles ?

– ces groupes entretiennent-ils des rapports institutionnels et/ou humains avec l’institution majoritaire de Salt Lake ?

– la pression que leur existence exerce, directement ou indirectement, sur celle-ci la fait-elle évoluer, et si oui comment ?

– quels rapports les groupes dissidents entretiennent-ils entre eux ?

– quelle évolution les groupes nouveaux ainsi constitués ont-ils suivie ou vont-ils suivre ?

Envoyer une proposition de 20 lignes, une biographie réduite, avant le 15 

Robert N. Bellah Speaking at the Orfalea Center for Global & International Studies

Is Global Civil Society Possible?

Robert N. Bellah
Elliott Professor of Sociology Emeritus, University of California at Berkeley

Thursday, February 2, 2012

4:00p.m.
Social Sciences & Media Studies Bldg., Room 2135

Presented by the Orfalea Center for Global & International Studies and the Walter H. Capps Center for the Study of Ethics, Religion, and Public Life

CFP: “Irreligion, Secularism and Social Change” Deadline for abstracts 13th February 2012

This CFP is the result of a discussion a few of us have been having about putting together an exploratory session at this year’s AAR, in the hope that we can create a group within the AAR yearly program to deal with irreligion/nonreligion and secularism topics going forward.

“Irreligion, Secularism and Social Change”

Exploratory session, American Academy of Religion annual meeting, Chicago, IL on Nov 17-20.

Society is always in flux, a fact that could hardly be missed in 2011, the year of the protester. As such, social change has become a hot topic in a variety of academic disciplines. Those dealing with religion are asking questions about how religious belief systems envision utopia, how religious institutions promote or stifle transformations of society, and how social change in turn transforms religion; but what about irreligious institutions, nontheistic belief systems and secularism? How do they relate to and interact with social change? This panel was born out of the belief that it is also important to investigate the relationship between social change and “the secular.” Paper topics may include but are not limited to nontheistic moral philosophies and worldviews, irreligious communities, institutions and individuals, or secularism as ideology and practice. We hope to get proposals from a wide array of disciplinary perspectives and papers will be selected based on thematic relevance and methodological diversity. If you are interested in participating please send an abstract of no more than 500 words to smithp@bu.edu by the end of the day, Feburary 13, 2012.

Please note that this panel is also part of an effort to create an “Irreligion and Secularism” unit within the American Academy of Religion annual meeting program and is therefore being pitched to the AAR as an exploratory session. This means that once your paper is selected the panel still requires approval from the AAR program committee before it gets accepted for this year’s annual meeting.

For further details please contact, Per Smith: smithp@bu.edu