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Call for Papers

Theme: From Religious Diversity to Religious Pluralism
Subtitle: What is at Stake?
Type: International Conference
Institution: Department of Sociology, University of Padua
   Annual Review of the Sociology of Religion
Location: Padua (Italy)
Date: 15.–16.2.2012
Deadline: 20.11.2011

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The social and religious panorama of the contemporary world is
changing, due to the growing pressure of migration, cultural
diversity, and religious diversity in particular. The presence of
cultures and traditions different from those historically present in
the various nations triggers processes of relating and comparing many
aspects of daily social life, from politics to education, from
economics to healthcare, from legal institutions to media, as well as
the relations between generations and genres. The aim of the
conference is to highlight how the factual situation of cultural and
religious diversity may lead to individual, social and political
choices of organized and recognized pluralism. It is a process that
leads to redefine both the individual and collective identities,
incessantly moving along the continuum that ranges from exclusion to
inclusion. If on one side liberal democracies acknowledge the right
of freedom of religion, on the other side the policies ensuring
social cohesion must continually negotiate the competition between
the shared social values and the specific ones of the different
religions. Starting from the different levels of legitimacy granted
to religions other than one’s own, the connections between religion
and politics are redefined as well as are the connections among the
various religions and between the believers and their own religions.
Such an unprecedented situation requires new tools both at conceptual
and methodological level in order to be described and interpreted
properly. The transition from religious diversity to religious
pluralism is one of the most important challenges that will reshape
the role of religion in contemporary society.

You are invited to submit your papers investigating the various
issues that, from the most diverse and unexpected points of view, are
linked to the theme of religious diversity and pluralism.

Please submit a 250 word abstract of your presentation to Giuseppe
Giordan ([email protected]) by November 20, 2011.

Since the conference will take place on the days leading up to the
weekend of the Venice Carnival, if you arrive in Padua via Venice
airport, we encourage you to reserve your air ticket as soon as
possible. For this reason the notification of acceptance of your
papers will be communicated to you within two or three days after
sending your abstracts.

Convenors

Enzo Pace (University of Padua)
Giuseppe Giordan (University of Padua)


Plenary Speakers

Jim Beckford (University of Warwick, UK), Re-thinking Religious
Pluralism

Gary Bouma (Monash University, Australia), Religious Diversity and
Social Policy: The Dilemmas of Multi-faith Liberal Democracies

Pauline Côté (University of Laval, Canada), Religious Diversity and
Public Policy. Who is Pluralist?

Roberto Motta (Recife University, Brazil), Brazilian Religions Old
and New: Secularization and Enchantment

Yoshihide Sakurai (Hokkaido University, Japan), Missionary
Trans-border Religions and Defensive Civil Society: A Japanese
Perspective to the Possibility of Religious Pluralism in Recent Japan

Jim Spickard (University of Redlands, USA), Diversity vs Pluralism?
Notes from the American Experience

Jörg Stolz (University of Lausanne, Switzerland), The National
Congregations Study Switzerland: Mapping and Assessing the Religious
Diversity of a Whole Country

William H. Swatos, Jr. (Augustana College, USA), Between Free
Exercise and No Establishment: The Dialectic of American Religious
Pluralism

Dedong Wei (Renmin University, China), Pluralism under Authoritarian
Rule: The Structure of Church and State in China

Jean-Paul Willaime (Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Sorbonne,
France), Religious and Philosophical Diversity as a Challenge for the
Secularism: A Belgian-French Comparison

Linda Woodhead (Lancaster University, UK), Spirituality and the
Institutionalisation of Religious Pluralism

Fenggang Yang (Purdue University, USA), Oligopoly Is Not Pluralism

Siniša Zrinščak (University of Zagreb, Croatia), Pluralism and
Diversity: Some Reflections from Post-communist Experience


Contact:

Giuseppe Giordan
Email: [email protected]
 
 
 
 
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