Teaching religion and international relations: disciplinary, pedagogical, and personal reflections

The study of religion and international religions has witnessed an exponential growth in recent decades. Courses and programs exploring the complex entanglements between faith and global politics have likewise mushroomed around the world. Despite this ferment, reflections on teaching religion and in...

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Authors: Bettiza, Gregorio 1979- (Author) ; Abdelkader, Deina (Author) ; Buckley, David T. (Author) ; Cesari, Jocelyne 1962- (Author) ; Haynes, Jeffrey 1953- (Author) ; Sandal, Nukhet A. (Author) ; Shani, Giorgio 1970- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Oxford University Press 2019
In: International studies perspectives
Year: 2019, Volume: 20, Issue: 4, Pages: 301-343
Further subjects:B Earth
B International policy
B Learning technique
B Religion
B Teaching method
B Politics
B Religiosity
B School teaching
B Institute of higher learning
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Summary:The study of religion and international religions has witnessed an exponential growth in recent decades. Courses and programs exploring the complex entanglements between faith and global politics have likewise mushroomed around the world. Despite this ferment, reflections on teaching religion and international relations have so far lagged behind. This forum seeks to remedy this general silence. It brings together a diverse range of scholars from a multiplicity of national, religious, methodological, and theoretical backgrounds who teach across a variety of different geographical settings including North America, Europe, and East Asia. Contributors reflect on three broad themes. First, how do we engage with the contested character of religion as a category of analysis and practice, and with the multidisciplinary nature of its study? Second, how does the context within which we operate—be it geographical, cultural, institutional, or historical—influence and shape who, what, and how we teach? Third, how do we address the important and, at times, contentious personal and ethical challenges that our research and teaching on religion and politics inevitably raises in the classroom?
Item Description:Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 339-343
ISSN:1528-3585
Contains:Enthalten in: International studies perspectives
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1093/isp/ekz012